Anonymous wrote:Yes. They ARE meaner. No one cares about anyone else. It’s me, me, me. How can I get ahead? How can I win? How can I look cool? How can I be popular? It’s brutal. There is zero empathy or willingness to help others. Both boys and girls are incredibly insecure and scared to death they’ll be targeted so they target others!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think relational aggression among popular kids is as high as it ever was if not worse.
I think kids who are not in this group or even more so have any kind of noted difference that makes them not a fair target...not neurotypical, LGBTQ, or really just even a "loner", "weird", whatever the word is, those kids get left alone far more than they did in our day.
My take is some kids are still the same amount of mean and they have fewer "allowed" channels to be mean so they turn on more of a smaller group to unleash the mean.
In other words, the popular kids have turned on themselves because they've gotten the message to leave vulnerable kids alone? If you're right, I don't have much sympathy for them, or the OP's daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I know that kids have been making other kids miserable since the dawn of time, but seeing and hearing about my HS DD's life makes me shiver.
It seems like everyone, independent of social status or clique, just seems to go after one and other for sport. DD is mild mannered, popular and typically kind, but freely admits that she's complicit in this type behavior on a regular basis. It's like they have nothing else to do but talk sh$t about each other nonstop, even their closest friends. And of course, with social media in the mix, they have endless opportunities and avenues to do so.
There have always been bullies and queen bees, but today's kids seem to be so much more aggressive and unapologetic about it. DD has a "if you can't beat them, join them" attitude which I find equally disturbing and yet also a survival skill. I know at the end of the day it weighs heavily on her and I just can't help but feel sad.
My teen years were no breeze, but so much of what's going on today truly makes my head spin. Has this been your experience?
So as a paradigm shift, your daughter is not kind. Definitely point it out to her. Not saying she won't end up being a kind person and this is not uncommon. But your daughter is NOT kind. So you tell us what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I know that kids have been making other kids miserable since the dawn of time, but seeing and hearing about my HS DD's life makes me shiver.
It seems like everyone, independent of social status or clique, just seems to go after one and other for sport. DD is mild mannered, popular and typically kind, but freely admits that she's complicit in this type behavior on a regular basis. It's like they have nothing else to do but talk sh$t about each other nonstop, even their closest friends. And of course, with social media in the mix, they have endless opportunities and avenues to do so.
There have always been bullies and queen bees, but today's kids seem to be so much more aggressive and unapologetic about it. DD has a "if you can't beat them, join them" attitude which I find equally disturbing and yet also a survival skill. I know at the end of the day it weighs heavily on her and I just can't help but feel sad.
My teen years were no breeze, but so much of what's going on today truly makes my head spin. Has this been your experience?
Anonymous wrote:I think relational aggression among popular kids is as high as it ever was if not worse.
I think kids who are not in this group or even more so have any kind of noted difference that makes them not a fair target...not neurotypical, LGBTQ, or really just even a "loner", "weird", whatever the word is, those kids get left alone far more than they did in our day.
My take is some kids are still the same amount of mean and they have fewer "allowed" channels to be mean so they turn on more of a smaller group to unleash the mean.