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Not just somewhere else

Bullying becoming more aggressive

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As bullying moves along what Judy Freeman, author of “Easing the Teasing” calls a continuum, it becomes more aggressive. There’s exclusion, or the “you can’t play with us, or you can’t sit here” mentality, known in psychology circles as “relational aggression.” (Herald file photo)

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What to do if you are being bullied

• Ignore the bully’s behavior whenever possible.; • Use social skills, such as assertiveness, negotiating, sharing, taking turns, inviting others to participate, assisting others, and asking for permission instead of using aggression and intimidation.; • Leave a bad situation.; • Rebuff the bully in a firm manner.; • Protect yourself emotionally and physically without using retaliation.; • Ask the bully to stop, and then walk away. If this does not work, report it to a teacher.; • Defuse the situation with humor.; • Find a way to agree with the bully. This takes the power away from the bully.; • Spend time in groups of students you can trust.; and • Practice what to say in front of a mirror or with friends. (Source: Bully Proof USA)

What to not do if you are a victim of bullying

• Do not cry or act hurt in front of the bully. That gives them victory.; • Do not lose your temper. Stay calm and in control.; • Do not escalate the situation.; • Do no return the aggression. Things will only get worse for you.; • Do not get others to gang up on the bully.; • Do no tease back or call the bully names. Be the bigger person.; • Do not bring a weapon to school. There are better ways to protect yourself. (Source: Bully Proof USA)

It’s now part of the national conversation.

Headlines from coast to coast have forced it there.

Two Columbine High School students in Littleton, Colo., shoot 13 classmates before turning their guns on themselves.

A 13-year-old Missouri girl who hangs herself after being cyberbullied by the mother of a classmate.

A Rutgers University freshman jumps off the George Washington Bridge in New York City after a secretly recorded video of him kissing a guy is posted on the Internet.

Three teenage boys – one in Houston, another in Greensburg, Ind., and the third in Tehachapi, Calif. – commit suicide within a matter of weeks in 2010, all after being bullied.

Sadly, these stories are not unique.

Bullying is happening everywhere, including Illinois.

About three hours southeast of Morris, a 10-year-old girl named Ashlynn Conner committed suicide last year because she was being bullied.

“She had been hurt by her classmates and neighborhood kids ... They called her fat and they called that little girl ugly,” said Rachel Plasch, a member of MWAH! Performing Arts Troupe – Messages Which Are Hopeful – to the students at Marseilles Elementary School, Marseilles, Monday, Sept. 10. 

Ashlynn had begged her mom to home-school her, but her mom didn’t understand why, so she didn’t allow it, Plasch continued.

The very next day, on Nov. 11, 2011, Ashlynn’s eighth-grade sister found Ashlynn’s dead body. Ashlynn hanged herself with a knitted scarf in her bedroom closet all because she had been bullied and didn’t know how to cope.

Even closer to Morris, about an hour north, in Batavia, a 15-year-old high school freshman named Dylan Wagner also hanged himself.

According to published reports, Wagner’s mother told the audience at a previous MWAH! presentation she and her husband came home after taking a walk to find a note from their son on the kitchen table and his body in the basement.

What is bullying?

Researchers traditionally have defined bullying as a repeated pattern of aggressive behavior that involves an imbalance of power and purposefully inflicts hardship or harm on those who are bullied.

Leading research on bullying indicates that there are serious and long-term consequences to bullying, such as increased depression, substance abuse, aggressive impulses, and school truancy.

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