Driven to the brink of suicide
by uncaring parents,
by vicious bullies
at school
is not something
any parents
want to brag about.
Having the last laugh
is still not enough,
having lived
every kid's worst nightmare,
you are happy
just travelling through life,
teaching your children
to be open-minded
to be comfortable
with other people
and other children,
who don't fit
the popular
mainstream
types.
Preaching
understanding
and
acceptance,
to help
young people
to stand for themselves
is easier
than
sharing
your own story,
the suicide
you nearly
didn't survive.
The graduation
from primary school
to high,
no longer,
the oldest in a school,
you'd known for half a decade,
the youngest again
the most vulnerable,
in scary,
unfamiliar territory,
heaving with hormonal kids
fighting for their place
under the sun.
Complicated by desire
for the opposite sex,
dreaming about having
a ready-made set of friends,
trying to be the same
like everyone else.
Gangs of pubescent girls,
slaps and punches,
group assaults,
fighting over
the same
good-looking
cool guy,
you didn't really
care about,
all you wanted
is non-cool dude,
the nerdy,
smart guy,
who dared
to dream big,
without following
the crowd.
With innocent naivety
you condemned
yourself
to be different,
leaving
behind
every level
of
that
silly
school
hierarchy,
you copped it
physically
and
spiritually,
everyone
from the bottom
could get away
with bullying
you.
Your care-givers
thought
you have done
something wrong
to be getting that kind
of attention.
"Pretty and obedient girls
are not bullied at school,"
was their answer to you.
They forced you
to go to school,
sobbing
and scared.
You couldn't learn,
constantly
watching your back.
"You're a weirdo
and you're never
going to be anything,"
ringed constantly in your ears
but you were determined,
not to let the bullies win.
And yet,
you were lonely,
the injuries
to your self-esteem
were worse than the pain,
harming yourself,
hiding in your room,
slicing your wrists,
you phoned your only friend
before you lost
your consciesness.
"She is attention-seeking,"
was a new brand name for you.
Your care-givers
labeled you 'difficult,'
but you managed
to get through,
you kept your dignity
and you finished the school.
Now,
with the benefit
of hindsight,
you are able to see
those few schools' years
as character building.
It made you
who you are.
You are glad,
that the attempted suicide
wasn't successful,
you are glad,
that you followed your dreams
having your own teenagers now,
you would never dare
to tell them this story...
too painful, too shameful, too close to your heart...
But also you never tell them
to put up with bullying,
or reassure them that it is "character building",
or tell them to ignore it and it will go away.
Whether they are victim or a bystander,
they have to report it
and force parents and school to deal with it,
because their lives are at stakes,
teenagers live now,
their years of high schools
are everything they care about,
friends are everything,
they can help them up
or pull them down...
Listen to them,
and deal with their worries,
immediatelly...
bullying is serious,
can not wait,
later is sometimes too late.
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