What Every Parent Needs to Know About Cyber Bullying

When looking back on your childhood, it’s probably easy to remember exactly who the bullies were at your school. Perhaps you were the target of their nasty comments, threats, or physical abuse. If you weren’t the target, you probably witnessed some of these exchanges or heard about them afterwards since word usually got around fast when a bully struck on his prey. In the past, bullies were almost always seen and heard. They found glory and pride in being the “tough guys” who everyone feared.

Most kids tried to avoid their bully. Some faked stomach aches to stay home, others hid out in the bathroom until their bully was out of sight. In either case, the thought of having to face another day of bullying caused great distress and often long-lasting trauma. It was not easy to shake a rumor started purposely to tarnish one’s reputation or to overcome the humiliation of being beaten up in front of friends, shoved in a locker for hours, or having your head dunked in a toilet. Even the most resilient children experienced some anxiety upon returning to school knowing they would have to face their bully again. Some kids confronted their bullies, hoping that by standing up to them they might get rid of them. Sometimes this worked and sometimes it made matters worse. Whether a child used the fight or flight approach with a bully is not to be judged in this article. The simple fact that they had this choice, however, will be one of focuses here.

Today, not all bullies are well known. In fact, some are not known at all. The cyber bully often keeps his or her identity hidden from others, which can cause even greater distress to his/her victims. When the bully cannot be identified, victims lose some control over the situation. Since they cannot choose to confront or even avoid their bully if they do not know who their bully is, they feel much more helpless.

Cyber bullies are not usually the people you would expect. They are different from the stereotypical bully of the past. For example, a cyber bully may be a girl spreading rumors about a former friend and secretively working hard to turn all of her friends against her. It could be a computer genius who changes student grades and tries to sabotage college entrance. It could even be a student setting a teacher up for legal problems because he was given a bad grade on a test. Clearly, cyber bullies do not hold the same stereotypes as bullies held in the past. Cyber bullies are usually nice kids from nice families who go online anonymously to “joke around” with other kids. The intention is usually not to cause great harm; however, unfortunately, this is often what occurs.

Cyber bullies can be found in many places. They may bully via text messaging on cell phones, post comments, blogs, or photos on Web sites, IM (instant message), or email. They may act alone, or they can enlist others to help them. For example, they can put up embarrassing pictures, or even use a tool like Photoshop to adjust a picture and make it look different causing a person to be embarrassed or humiliated. One of my patients reported that a girl at school cut and pasted her face onto another person’s nude body (which was less than ideal for a teenager) and then spread photos around school. Cyber bullies can also create fictitious Web sites or email addresses and pretend to be someone else so that they have the “freedom and comfort” to say abusive and hurtful things. In other words, their anonymity does not allow for the person to respond directly to their bullying behavior, which unfortunately increases the likelihood that they will engage in it. Even more unfortunate is the fact that their victims usually are left feeling paranoid and uncertain as to who they can trust. Lastly, cyber bullies can post negative or disrespectful comments on Web sites and ask others to join in to further the person’s pain. A friend told me that her daughter was inundated with hurtful comments on her MySpace page after her “best friend” enlisted several of their classmates to post all the things they did not like about her.

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From Around the Web:
10.19.2007
Tami McCandlish
This is all very true. I have been cyber-bullied. I've actually just published a book about relational aggression. It's titled Flying Grounded: My Spiritual Triumph Over Female Bullying. If anyone is interested, it can be found at http://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/book_detail.asp?isbn...
It feels good to write.

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