Anonymous wrote:Have your son learn wrestling, martial arts, anything to boost his confidence. It did wonders for ours.
The one thing I should have done is personally contacted the mean kid's parents.
Anonymous wrote:I met with the Principal at my kid's school when I heard daily how he was treated. After one meeting, it stopped.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a tough issue. I eventually switched schools when it got really bad. At first I told my son to ignore the mean kid. Then we got the teachers and school counselor involved. The mean kid was not doing anything physical, but he taunted and followed my son ALL the time.
The school tried to help, but nothing they did really worked. My son was miserable and it affected his self-esteem. We eventually switched schools.
The one thing I should have done is personally contacted the mean kid's parents. I was reluctant to escalate it to that extent, because I wanted to believe that the kids could work it all out. The mean kid lived close to us, and I didn't want it to become a huge neighborhood rift. That was a mistake. Perhaps the parents might have been able to help (I doubt it, though).
We love our new school and my son is very happy.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a tough issue. I eventually switched schools when it got really bad. At first I told my son to ignore the mean kid. Then we got the teachers and school counselor involved. The mean kid was not doing anything physical, but he taunted and followed my son ALL the time.
The school tried to help, but nothing they did really worked. My son was miserable and it affected his self-esteem. We eventually switched schools.
The one thing I should have done is personally contacted the mean kid's parents. I was reluctant to escalate it to that extent, because I wanted to believe that the kids could work it all out. The mean kid lived close to us, and I didn't want it to become a huge neighborhood rift. That was a mistake. Perhaps the parents might have been able to help (I doubt it, though).
We love our new school and my son is very happy.
Anonymous wrote:As a victim of severe bullying, do NOT tell him to ignore it. That will just make them try to annoy him even harder.
Write out a list of options, and have him cross out the ones that absolutely won't work in his mind. Then rewrite the list with the possibilities, and go through what he thinks the end result would be of doing each one.
Anonymous wrote:Advice to OP--try not to grill your son on this every day. It's hard, because you are worried--but, be sympathetic, but don't pity him. That makes it worse.