The
High Cost of Bullying
The
negative impact of being bullied is significant. Victims come
to view school as an unhappy and unsafe place. Seven percent of
American 8th graders stay home from school at least
once a month because of bullying. The already great likelihood
of social isolation is compounded by the concerns of peers that
they will lose social status by associating with the victim, or
risk becoming victims themselves. In the long run, chronic victims
of bullying can suffer depression and low self-esteem that persists
into adulthood.
Pure
victims and bully victims suffer about equally under their oppressors.
A recent British study of 1,600 grade-school children found that
victims and bully/victims were at an increased risk of coughs,
colds, aches, pains, nausea and psychosomatic problems like nightmares
and bed-wetting. Their parents also reported they were more likely
to fake illnesses to avoid going to school. Pure bullies, by comparison,
proved healthier and mentally stronger than those they harass,
suggesting, in the words of the study, that bullies “have a constitution
that allows them to be dominant in inappropriate ways.”
Bullying
victims may derive some bitter satisfaction from learning that
the long-term psychological harm they suffer from the experience
will be more than matched by the negative trajectory likely to
mark the life of their tormentors. The seminal studies of bullying
conducted in Norway in the 1990s found that 60 percent of boys
identified as bullies in grades 6-9 had at least one criminal
conviction by age 24, and 40 percent had three or more convictions.
The
pain of physical violence—even the psychological scars it leaves—may
be far less than that inflicted by relational or indirect aggression
in the age of the Internet, e-mail, instant messaging and blogs.
Gossiping, shunning and slander, the weapons of the relational
aggressor, have been rendered immensely more hurtful by the ability
of relational bullies to access these virtually universal forms
of communication. The cruel remark formerly whispered in a hallway
can now be broadcast anonymously to the entire school or community
almost instantly.
Clearly,
the widely held view among adults that bullying is merely an unpleasant
but normal aspect of childhood, or even a “rite of passage,” is
unwarranted. It is not “normal” to be the chronic victim of aggression,
nor is it “normal” to persecute the weak and isolated. Both events
are common enough is society, but they remain, deplorable in the
first instance and reprehensible, if not criminal, in the second.
The
antisocial character of bullying is even acknowledged, to a degree,
by the bully himself, in his enlistment of others as active or
passive participants in the behavior, and by the aforementioned
fact that any intercession on the side of the victim usually ends
the bullying almost immediately.
It
follows that the first obligation of those observing an instance
of bullying—physical or relational—is to refuse to participate.
To laugh at the predicament of someone being harassed by a bully,
or to take part in the slandering of a peer amounts to condoning
the behavior.
Wolke, D (1999) Physical
and Relational Bullying in Young Children: Distinguishing
Features .ESRC End of Award Report Summary. Economic and
Social Research Council, Great Britain, quoted in Graham,
S., Playground Bullies are Healthier in Body and Mind
Than Their Victims, Scientific American News Release,
22 August 2004; available at http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=00053BB6-A71D-1C60-B882809EC588ED9F;
accessed 22 August 2004
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