As told to Ann DeGrey
The first time I received a phone call from my son's school about his bullying, it hit me like a punch to the gut. The school councillor detailed incidents where he mocked, belittled, and physically intimidated his classmates. Surely, she couldn't be talking about my sweet boy Ethan?
I knew my 11-year-old had a temper, and he lashed out at his younger sister. But I grew up in a large family and I know all siblings fight every now and then. I had no idea that Ethan was terrorising his classmates, as well as his teachers.
I was told Ethan's bullying incidents are varied and distressing. There was a time he orchestrated a cruel prank on a classmate, convincing the boy that he was invited to a non-existent party. The boy apparently turned up, with a present, only to be embarrassed to discover there was no party.
Ethan also spread rumours about a girl in his class, who'd survived cancer, telling people she was wearing a wig and encouraging other kids to constantly pull her hair. This girl ended up leaving the school because of Ethan's bullying.
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He also did seemingly small but upsetting things, such as every day he'd throw the school bag of a special needs student over the school fence onto the street. He also bullied a girl with a speech impediment, tossed a rotting banana at his teacher, and made up a nasty song which he sang to a boy whose parents had just divorced. And the list goes on. The councillor explained to me that it's not just the physical bullying but the emotional and psychological torment he inflicts that cuts the deepest.
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