Technology

bullying is immoral

Perhaps the saddest reality about the recent wave of youth suicides due to bullying is that it has revealed a lack of active involvement in prevention by adults.

Time and time again, I have heard distraught parents say in interviews that they told school officials about their children’s bullying, but little or nothing was done.

Bullying is a poison that corrodes the spirit and emotions of its victims. The spirit and emotions of human beings are sensitive and actually act as a protective “skin” over the person’s sense of self. Harassment, which can be physical or verbal, impinges on a person’s sense of self, which is very delicate, and can permanently corrode that very sense, leading victims to anguish, despair, a diminished sense of self himself and, in the worst cases, to suicide. .

This corrosion is no different from the process that occurs if a person accidentally drinks a corrosive substance, such as antifreeze. Long after the victim has been treated, residual burns remain on their internal organs and can result in a burned hole in the esophagus.

Or the effects of bullying can be compared to what happens when one is badly burned. Severe and persistent bullying is like a third degree burn, burning from skin to muscle and bone. The skin is the largest organ in the human body and its job is to protect our internal organs and structures. A severe burn removes protection and in addition to severe pain, the victim is at risk of infection.

Intimidation results in unprotected spirits, subject to infection and, as in the case of physical burns, spiritual and emotional burns that result in infection all too often lead to death.

We have a tendency to lose the importance of one’s spirit. A person with a downcast spirit is hindered and crippled, relying on poisonous actions and words as a measure of his own worth. They have a hard time believing in themselves and because they are hurt and filled with hate from others, they attack others or go into a protective shell.

No amount of love can break them out of that shell. Like a physical burn, these spiritual and emotional burns take a long time to heal and leave horrible scars.

Much attention has been or is being paid to gay children who have been and are being bullied, but the truth is that all kinds of children who are different or perceived to be different are bullied. A father who defended his daughter who was being bullied recently appeared on television. His daughter has cerebral palsy and she was so traumatized by the bullying that she no longer wanted to ride the school bus.

The father was arrested and charged with a misdemeanor.

Children are not the only ones who experience bullying. Adults are bullied too, perhaps the same adults who were bullied as children. You don’t really say anything if you’re bullied as an adult; you put up with it for whatever reason you feel you have to put up with, and you try to carry on. To make matters worse, some adults participate in the bullying of children, which in effect encourages the children who bully to continue doing so.

The difference between being bullied now and, say, 20 years ago, is the Internet in general and social media in particular. There is a strange power that the written word has; a toxic and caustic email can cause the deepest anguish, and if a toxic message is posted on Facebook or Twitter, hundreds of people, known and unknown, immediately jump into the fray.

The burning of the spirit of the harassed person begins and burns them to bone and muscle.

We all do better when we know more. I guess a lot of adults know better, having survived bullying. Adults, then, who have been on fire should be active participants in putting out the fires that bullies are starting today, or, better, be active in preventing fires.

If ever there was a need for people to embrace diversity, it is now. Despite the complaints of some who “want their country back,” neither the United States nor the world will ever be the same. Homosexuality will never again be ignored by those who want to ignore it. Violence in the form of intimidation against homosexual youth and adults is not going to make homosexuals “go away.” The world is making room for those who are not white, straight, healthy men.

If adults cannot and do not step up, teaching their children that bullying is wrong and reminding themselves that bullying is not a sign of power but represents the despicable form of weakness, the wave of suicides will only will increase. Children, adolescents and young adults need us, who now know better, to do better.

We don’t need another person’s spirit burned to the core. No other. Enough already.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *