TEAMING
UP ON BULLIES
By Dan Coulter
When I was little, playing with some neighborhood kids, I let them
roll me up in a rug. Or I rolled myself up, I can’t remember. I do
remember the feeling of being totally helpless. Someone sat on me and
didn’t let me unroll for an eternity of probably a minute or so. I
struggled, realizing that no matter what I did, I couldn’t free
myself. I was absolutely at the other kids’ mercy until they let me
go.
That’s something like the sense of desperation I now realize my
college-age son, Drew (who has Asperger Syndrome), felt when he was
bullied in high school. He talked about it at the dinner table last
night. I didn’t understand until that moment how deeply it affected
him.
My wife and I knew he had to deal with bullies in high school. We
worked with him, teaching him to ignore taunts so he didn’t get into
fights. We urged him to tell us about any problems. We made sure key
people at Drew’s school knew his situation and that Drew knew who to
go to when he was being tormented.
And he listened. When kids who knew that Drew didn’t like rapper
Eminem’s lyrics and that Drew was sensitive to noise sat behind him
on the bus with a boombox and blasted an Eminem CD into Drew’s ears
– he kept himself in check.
He got off the bus and went to the coach who was the school
disciplinarian, as we’d told him to. The coach found out who was on
the bus and read them the riot act.
We appreciated this. It helped. But I’m realizing now that we only
got the tip of the iceberg. Drew got good grades and overcame multiple
Asperger Syndrome challenges to make a number of friends his senior
year. But he didn’t tell us the full extent of the daily attempts
other kids made to tear him down. As Drew describes it now, I have a
better understanding that lot of the taunting was routine and subtle
and omnipresent. And Drew felt it was inescapable and often
unreportable. While the coach dealt with the highly visible bus
incident, Drew says that when he did report being harassed, often
teachers didn’t do anything.
There’s no shortage of approaches to dealing with bullying, teasing
and insults. Most of us have “ignore them” in our advice kit. I
know of a father who felt his son’s karate classes could help him
deal with bullies. I hope it’s helpful, but my experience is that a
kid with special needs who gets into a physical confrontation is
frequently assumed to be in the wrong. And only a fraction of bullying
is physical.
Even if your kid is big and strong or knows martial arts, how does he
deal with the continual, subtle, non-physical stuff that the teachers
never see? Having conditions such as AS puts some kids at a natural
disadvantage and makes them a magnet for the worst in some other kids.
So what do you do?
The best advice I’ve heard about came from a panel of people with
Asperger Syndrome in a seminar on bullying. They said, “What are you
talking with us for? Talk to the bullies! They’re the ones causing
the problem!”
I think you can take this to the bank. No matter what you do to
prepare your child to deal with a range of bullying behavior, you’ve
also got to hit the problem at its source.
Fortunately, there’s a growing wave of information, programs and
resources that can help you and your child’s school address the
source of the problem. Schools can help prevent bullying by making all
their students and staff aware of what it looks like, that it’s
serious – and that it won’t be tolerated. More and more schools
are starting formal awareness training on bullying. The state of North
Carolina, where I live, has initiated a “Bullies Don’t Belong”
campaign supported by the state’s attorney general.
If you have a child in school being harassed, banding together with
other parents to support bullying awareness training for students and
staff is one of the best investments you can make in your child’s
education. And if you’re frustrated at trying to access limited
school resources to support a relatively small number of students with
special needs, this time you’re pushing for something that benefits
kids throughout the school. I’ve seen estimates that one-third of
school kids have been bullied.
It’s terrible that the new bullying awareness programs were sparked
by a series of school shootings, but maybe these programs can help
prevent future violence – and make daily life at school dramatically
better for many, many kids who would never consider violence.
These programs can help those teachers and school officials who need
to better understand the problem. An administrator at one of my
son’s schools told us that kids learning to deal with bullies on
their own was just a part of growing up. But what good does it do to
tell our kids not to get into fights over taunting and cruelty and to
tell a teacher instead, if the teachers don't take action? This just
makes kids feel helpless and trains them to suffer in silence.
Your PTA is a good place to get the ball rolling. In fact, the
national PTA organization has information about dealing with bullying
on its website at: http://www.pta.org/bullying/. This information
includes signs to watch for that your child is being bullied (or that
your child is a bully.)
I don’t believe in looking back and beating yourself up for what you
might have done, but I do think we need to learn from the past. I had
to wait until my son was in college (where his experience is
light-years better than high school) to learn just how tough
high-school really was for him socially. Luckily, you can tap into
resources that weren’t available to me just a few years ago.
Here’s hoping you find them and use them. Nothing is going to
totally eliminate bullying. But if you prepare your child AND support
awareness programs to reduce the problem, you’re taking out a huge
insurance policy in his happiness. You don’t want your child feeling
helpless, like he’s rolled in a rug. You want him feeling free to
learn in a safe, positive atmosphere.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dan Coulter is the writer/director of the video:
"ASPERGER SYNDROME DAD: Becoming An Even Better Father To Your
Child With AS." You can find more articles on his website at:
www.coultervideo.com.
Copyright 2004 Dan Coulter Used by permission. All rights reserved.