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Psychology

Bullying and the infamous school bus

One repeating issue I've found to be linked throughout my elementary, middle, and high school years is on the bus, in the lunchroom, in hallways, and even in the classroom in front of the teacher who doesn't take the time to notice. This issue is bullying, and even more so, those who choose to ignore it. If knowledge of a crime is just as criminal as executing it, then what's the difference? No one says you have to save the world, but this doesn't justify looking the other way when there is a chance for moral intervention.

The need to belong to the most dominating group is an innate human characteristic. Some will go to any extent just to fulfill this need, but from an early age I developed my own leadership and refused to join in on the taunting-regardless of how I'd be viewed. This was perhaps the first value I discovered and felt so strongly about. It mostly began in first grade when I stood up for my neighbor on the school bus even though I was younger than the bully. The mere thought of someone taking advantage of another's weakness disgusted me. It didn't seem like a big deal to me, but when I received a phone call from her father thanking me, I realized how a small gesture could have such an impact on someone. It proves how one moment of risking your reputation will seem inconspicuous to you years later; however, it could be completely different for the person you defended. The next year there was a girl in my class who was socially exiled just because of her ethnic appearance. When others talked to me about her behind her back, I simply ignored them, became her friend, and found she was the kindest girl I met that year. I accompanied her while she ate lunch in the principal's office since no other table would accommodate her. From this experience I found that nothing was more touching than seeing the grateful look on her face since she knew I did not do it out of pity but rather I took the chance to see her in a different light.
When I was in seventh grade I was the only girl in a class full of boys. The teacher closed her eyes to everything that happened to me that yearwhen I was helpless to stand up to the harassment, where was someone else? The sinking feeling of looking around for help and seeing everyone literally turn their head was something I never want to face again and would never wish it on anyone else. Another great deal of my independence stemmed from the following realization: never expect to depend on anyone but yourself,


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Bullying and the infamous school bus

  • 1 of 6

    by Elsa Oliva

    One repeating issue I've found to be linked throughout my elementary, middle, and high school years is on the bu... read more

  • 2 of 6

    by Kimberley Quinn

    A School Bus Rider/A School Bus Driver. I've Seen Both Sides Now Having been the target, growing up, of bully... read more

  • 3 of 6

    by Mary Teresa Fowler

    There needs to be a voice for students everywhere who are caught in the middle between unruly school bus students and... read more

  • 4 of 6

    by The Hitchhiker

    It's a major problem, and many many teachers fail to recognise it, and indeed dealing with a problem that occurs out ... read more

  • 5 of 6

    by Barbara Stockton

    Whether the bully is in school, on the bus or in the work place the one thing that they all have in common is the fa... read more

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Bullying and the infamous school bus

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