About not telling other people’s kids to behave…
assault??? Read this and tell me who was assaulting whom.
I was at church. There was a young mother and two children, the girl about ten, and boy about 5, seated to the front and to left of me. To the left of them was the altar. So the mother’s range of vision was to not to be able to see her children unless she turned to look at them. And every time the mother turned to pay attention to Mass, her daughter would pinch her little brother in some way. Arm, leg, belly…
He’d squirm and wiggle and tug at his mother’s sleeve. And then she’d turn and shush him, seating him back on the pew, between her and her daughter, where he would sit and pout.
Then just before Communion time, the little girl reached back to her brother’s ear lobe and took it beween her thumbnail and first fingernail and rolled the ear lobe very carefully while he cringed in fear of moving. If he moved she pinched harder.
All the people surrounding saw this display of bullying… The man and woman who sat directly behind them sat there, wide-eyed, in shocked horror. I leaned over, said “excuse me” to the man next to me, pushing him gently aside.
I took the girl by the wrist very gently, but firmly, and softly told her “If you hurt that little boy again, I am taking you out that door right there. Now, go kneel on the other side of your mother.” She about climbed her mother’s back to get away from me.
Her mother turned, and I smiled at her and I mouthed “I will explain later.” She nodded and smiled back. The man and woman next to me whispered “thank you” to me, and the little boy smiled the sweetest smile up at me, touching my hand. He was good as gold thru the rest of Mass, quietly entertaining himself with the hymnals and pictures on the walls. Sitting with unusual patience for his age, exactly where his mother had put him.
The girl kept leaning back to pek around her mother, to watch me from the corner of her eye the rest of Mass. I just pointed forward. And true to my word, I explained to the mother, who turned out to be partially deaf, what her daughter had been doing. The little boy was profoundly deaf.
Everything I said was said in kindness. I told the mother that what I had witnessed was far too practiced to be a one time incident. I asked her to ask her son about it, which she did right then and there. The girl started ot leave and I told ehr sit down. She did. I asked the mother to get help for her daughter, possibly through school. She thanked me and the little boy hugged me. The little girl glared at me.
I used to run a daycare center for 12 years, and I fully recognized all the signs of a bully. And this girl was a classic. She acted totally oblivious to all the adults around her. Why? Because nobody cared to stop what she was doing, and so she thought it was okay to do it. Unless her mother turned around and caught her.
Her mother needed the support of other adults telling the child the behavior was bad.
Those 3 busybodies are bullies. And they are certainly old enough to know better.
I would have simply said to the 3 staring people “It’s really not polite to stare and whisper about people, would you please be so kind as to stop? Thankyou.” And it can be said softly enough to only carry so far as the people around me. And if they didn’t stop, I would inform an usher.
It’s part of an usher’s duty to stop people from disturbing other people at Mass.
This wasn’t like they HAD to do what they were doing. If themother had formed bad havbits, then at least maybe you oculd reach the daughters at an early enough age. Teens embarrrass easily. Sometimes doing a little bit of “shame on you” action is a greater kindness to them, in the long run, than to let them keep doing that.
Too many people mistake bullying as self-confidence.
This isn’t like a man in our church who carries an oxygen tank which puffs and wheezes all through the Mass, or an infant who can be cradled and hushed with a bottle. This is people of an age to know better, who are INTENTIONALLY behaving rudely and have NO right to do so.
And it actually would embarrass me more to HAVE to say something than to sit through the Mass being stared at.
Theresa Anne