I want to share this story of how I didn't stand up when I saw someone being bullied, how I let my fears walk before me, let them weave a blanket of silence between my mouth and the sky. Cyber-bullying is in the news these past few weeks, and my dear friends at BlogHer are opening a dialogue about civility, decency, about opening our mouths when we should. Thank you, BlogHer.
My two young boys and I delivered brochures along the short streets of the old neighborhood behind the elementary school. I never canvassed here before, never saw these hundred homes hidden by eucalyptus and palm, a hundred older homes still untouched by recent years of rocket crazy real estate investors. I handed the boys handfuls of books at a time, and they ran ahead of me, trading houses back and forth, leaving books on faded wooden door steps and cracked driveways.
I wasn't in the mood to knock on doors. I wasn't in the mood for Avon, period. I should be in the mood, gas is expensive and children are expensive and I have but three days left in this campaign. But I can't shake random memories from my mind. Something about my lack of money, my lack of time, how behind I have fallen, the light through the trees in the neighborhood and watching my boys race through crab grass to drop a brochure, something about all of these things mixed together, mixed with uncertainty, mixed with being home and being a thousand miles from any kind of rest, something about my mixed up mind keeps me from getting a whole lotta anything done.
And so I watched those brochures fly through the air and land on pebbles and stopped to pet a skinny yellow cat and walked the boys to the playground behind the school, did all of these things without thinking, a zombie momma trapped in another dimension. And all I could think and remember, when my brain finally reopened, while my boys swung higher than the trees, was a snapshot of a memory from the eighth grade.
My hometown in New England was small. Most of the townspeople worked at the State Hospital, an institution for the mentally handicapped. We lived near the escape siren, and when a patient left the grounds, the siren blew like the warning signal for a tornado. Old ladies would lock their doors, afraid of the 'retarded.' Our house sat across the street from the library, a quarter mile from the town common. My parents purchased a beat-up Victorian mansion; it was over 200 years old and runanway slaves hid in a secret room under the stairs during the time of the Underground Railroad. The neighbors swore the ghost of the previous owner haunted the grounds. She hung herself in the dilapidated barn in the backyard, the victim of alcoholism and small town gossip. The light from a single candle she place in the loft flickered in the middle of the night, said the neighbors, and her moans his behind the wind during winter storms.
My school had only 400 students, grades seven through twelve. I hung out with the nerdy band bunch, and though we were ostracized and ridiculed by the beautiful and popular, we weren't treated like a small handful of students, the poorest of the poor from a dirt poor town. One of these kids was a girl named Trish. She was one year younger than me, a seventh grader, with a halo of frizzy blonde hair and watery eyes. I never heard her say a word. She sat alone in the lunchroom, never eating, never bringing or buying a lunch, never cracking a book or a smile, a pale goddess of the poor. She sat and stared into space, and I found myself watching her over the course of the year, wondering why she never ate. Now I'm sure she was too poor to even bring a peanut butter sandwich, but in my eighth grade mind that poor was for people in books, not in my school, not across from me at lunch.
I saw Diane Wilson and her pack of rabid cheerleaders torment Trish. Diane wore feathered roach clips in her hair and her older boyfriend drove a Camaro. She poked Trish in the back with math protractors and tripped her on her way out of the lunchroom. I wanted to protect Trish, to jump in between them, to grab Trish and run to the office, but I never did. I never did anything. Trish never cried, never ran to the office. She picked up her books each time, and walked away, eyes watery, back ramrod straight.
That Christmas I made homemade cards for my friends. I wrote funny poems and taped a candy cane inside each one. I applied glue to envelopes and sprinkled it with colored glitter. I made one of these for Trish, too, with a cotton ball snowman on the cover and these words inside:
Dear Trish, I am sorry that everyone is so mean to you. I would like to be your friend. I like your hair. Sincerely, Birdie.
I kept that card for a week, up until the day before Christmas Eve, our last day of school before vacation. I kept it in my blue canvas bookbag, at the very bottom, under my math book, where no one could see it, and waited for a moment when I would find Trish alone. But that moment never came, and I was too afraid to slip it inside her books, or inside her locker where others left her mean notes.
Trish didn't return to school after vacation. I never found out why. Maybe her family moved. Maybe she died of lonliness or malnutrition or beatings from her father. I wish I knew. I wish I gave her that card.
Birdie is an Avon Lady and shares funny Avon Lady Adventures, Avon sales advice, and brutally honest Avon product reviews at Beauty Dish.
Comments
MLK Jr's injuctions are true...
Cowardice asks the question - is it safe?
Expediency asks the question - is it politic?
Vanity asks the question - is it popular?
But conscience asks the question - is it right?
And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular; but one must take it because it is right.
It's a message we need to teach our children, because [t]he time is always right to do what is right.
I can't help but think that Essense Carson and the rest of the Rutger's Women's Basketball Team really get this idea about doing the right thing -- what wonderful role models they are.
Autumn, I agree 100 percent
Thank you so much for the links.
I was completely moved by Essense Carson's comments yesterday, driving along, listening to NPR. Nice to see them setting an example that we can all point to.
And you know my 11 year old got an earful! :)
Update: Whoops hit send too soon! Birdie, thank you for this brave post. Sounds like this experience helped make you the compassionate voice you are today.
Best,
Lisa
Lisa Stone
BlogHer Co-founder
Surfette
Autum and Lisa, we are surrounded by
wonderful roll models
It's amazing how many women are stepping up and speaking out on bullying - whether it's cyber bullying as occurred in such a public way over the last couple of weeks, and now these strong, articulate women on the Rutger's team speaking out against bullying "on air."
I think times are changing, and it's wonderful to see it happen online, on air, in front of our eyes. My boys are learning an incredible amount from this dialogue, and I hope that my own story of cowardice and the brave examples these women are setting will inspire them to speak out.
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
I'd like to add a "think
I'd like to add a "think first" caveat, based on what my household now refers to as "The Subway Incident." Be careful how you support those being attacked.
My husband and I were eating in a Subway sub shop when a guy and gal came in. He immediately started ripping at the women behind the counter telling them that they have bad attitudes and shouldn't be seen in public and should be working in the very back corner of a factory somewhere... etc. etc. Meanwhile I was getting madder and madder. Of the six adults in the room, one of them - the bully - had command of the space and was making sure the gals behind the counter felt like dog meat.
Something in me flipped to "Not on My Watch" and I walked up to him, poked him in the shoulder and told him that we were now leaving because of HIM, not the women behind the counter. Well... no one ever told me the "no touchie rule" when arguing with men. He went off like a rocket screaming at me and then I went off like some gang member from east LA and got into his face. My husband (who deals with in-your-face guys all day), calmly took a physical stand between us and got me out of there.
My husband, reminded me later that if the guy DID touch me, that then he would have gone for him and most likely HE would have been tossed in jail, i.e. think first when dealing with vile personalities.
This was a one time shot for me. Usually when I witness such bullying, I just stand very near, motionless and act as a silent witness. That's enough to throw them off kilter and to back off. Would I have done it again? You bet. BUT this time I wouldn't have touched him.
Mary, good, thoughtful advice
Mary, thanks for sharing your experience. Some bullies may explode into worse behavior, as you experienced. It's always a good idea to keep your distance when speaking out, you just never know what kind of person you're dealing with. Brava to you for speaking out! I bet the woman behind the counter was grateful.
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
Birdie, if you ever decide
Birdie, if you ever decide to quit selling Avon and write a book full of stories like this, I will be your first and best customer. You are a wonderful writer and this post was incredibly powerful and moving. You do know how to tell a story!
I was the one who was bullied. It was miserable. Stories like this are healing.
Karoli (aka) DrumsNWhistles (odd time signatures)
Karoli, a huge hug to you!
I'm so sorry you were bullied. I bet it made you an incredibly compassionate and understanding person, seems like all that pain turns into deep good in most folks.
Thanks for your kind comments regarding my writing. I wrote a memoir, finished it recently, and I've sent it out! I hope something comes of it, my fingers and toes are seriously crossed! LOL!!!
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
touching write
Touching write, Birdie. Like Drums, I was one of the kids bullied, but mainly in elementary school, not high school. However, neither was I popular in high school. I tend to stare blankly at people who dream of their high school days and want to turn back the clock. There's not enough money in the world to pay me to go back.
Band nerd, huh? Both my children did the marching band, one in Georgia, the other today in Jersey. But where I grew up, band members were the cool ones. :-)
"Love is liquid. Brew and be drunkards!" ~~Nordette And here's a link to the blog.
Nordette, band nerds ROCK!!
I bet your children loved their time in band, I know I did. I'm sorry you were bullied, too. I was never popular but thankfully was never bullied. I would NEVER go back to my HS days, not for a million bucks!
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
I spent most of my grade
I spent most of my grade school years on the receiving end of the bully stick...and I never cared all that much. I was there mostly of my own choosing, because I choose to be the one that did stand up. This often ended with me being picked on as well, and I wouldn't trade that for anything. I pity people that feel they have to berate and belittle others to make themselves feel better.
My daughter asked me the other day if I had ever been popular in school. I proudly answered no. I told her that being "popular" is all in the way you look at it. I told her that I had friends and that to them, I was popular. And that was good enough for me. She walks away from the kids who pick on and tease others. She's not afraid to tell an adult when someone is mean to someone else. She stands up. And I'm proud of her.
viciousrumours, good for you!
The words you spoke to your daughter gave her a more compassionate way of looking at popularity. What a wonderful thing to say. It sounds like your daughter has her life together, and I'm sure she will speak up when she sees others being bullied. Big hugs to you and your daughter.
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
Touching and sad
Touching and sad, Birdie. I was always on the receiving end of the bullying too, and I can remember walking away just like Trish did, pretending I hadn't heard a thing and they hadn't gotten to me.
Nordette, I'm with you. I can't imagine wanting to go back to high school for even three seconds.
Miss T, thanks for sharing your experience
Too many people have had this experience, had to build a wall against themselves and those who hurt them. I wish I was stronger as a child, wish I could rearrange those moments, stick up for Trish.
Birdie
Birdie's BlogHer Contributing Editor Blog
La Pajaro
Beauty Dish
Very inspiring
You are a very inspiring writer. This is also very true and very sad. I was bullied when I was a kid, and I didn't like it at all. But it's olny when I got bullied did I realize who my true friends really were. My true friends stuck up for me. Come to find out, I only had 1 true friend. But thats all I needed to keep me going. That's all I needed to keep me strong, and ready for what lays ahead in the future. Thank you.
Debb