I think very few of us are strong enough to just shrug it off. It hurts, and the memory of that feeling sticks. The ones who resort to firearms or suicide are the tip of the iceberg. There are many more who carry anxiety throughout life over treatment they didn’t invite and couldn’t stop, over being singled out and having no one come to their defense or stand with them. The trauma ends, but the stress of going through it doesn’t.
In no way do I mean disrespect for the bullied, but why would this be? You go to grade school, then to high school, which is a totally new world. Then perhaps to college, which is another totally new world. Then into the world which is REALLY a totally new world.
I attended a high school full of some of the toughest hillbillies you could imagine. There was fighting all the time. I am amused to remember that I suddenly realized after maybe two months of college that I had not only not been in a fight, I hadn’t even seen one.
I mentioned this to a new friend in that college and told him about my amazement. He was amazed that I was amazed. “Of course not” he said. He then went on to tell me how, in his Catholic high school, there was almost never fighting. I was just dumbstruck. I asked some others, and they reported much the same.
I was about as “up from the country” as anybody could ask for in an urban Jesuit college. Weirdly, I was from the most southern place of any of the students I knew, and I was only from SW Mo. My accent was amusing to them, and I must have been asked to say “I like ice” a thousand times, to general amusement. People were amused, but it wasn’t a “bullying” thing. Even my Anglo/Norman name was of interest to some of them, with all of their Polish, German, Lithuanian, Italian and Eastern European names. I remember remarking about that, and they didn’t believe me that I had never imagined a significant number of people with names like theirs. So I brought a phone book from home, and sure enough, all “Smith” and “Jones” and “Shelton” and “McCracken”. People passed it around as if it was a runic artifact or something, just discovered in a hidden compartment in the gunwale of a long-buried Viking ship.
Major culture shocks, and I did take some ribbing, but most of it was pleasant. Being in that “new world” was not only surprising in a lot of ways, it was also pleasant at least in the way that I didn’t have to fight my way through it. I did have one fight, with a drunken kid from Milwaukee with a German last name, and for no real reason that I can recall. But we were both too drunk to do any real damage. I couldn’t credit it with being a real fight, it was so sloppy and inept.
By the time I went to grad school (another totally new world) I had learned not to wear white socks with a suit and to speak a passable imitation of a northern dialect. Well, maybe not so passable. My wife confessed, after a few months of dating, that she considered me a hick when we met, and, of course, ignorant, because, she being from the north assumed everyone with a southern accent was irredeemably ignorant. So I guess I must have let my linguistic guard down some with her. Now, I no longer try, though I think I could still speak Yankee if my life depended on it.
I like “new worlds”, and I am put to wonder about how people don’t know they’re in them, and that they’re really new, and that life is full of new worlds. But again, I’m not criticizing those who bear the permanent scars. I believe them. I just have a failure of comprehension in that regard.
Is there something new now? Something different?