Anonymous wrote:Continuing to harangue someone about weight when they have not asked your opinion and you are not the child's physician is, in itself, akin to bullying. This kind of holier-than-thou backseat parenting is deeply offensive.
Ok, just want to make sure I understand - suggesting that in addition to addressing bullying at school it is indeed the mom's responsibility to address the child's weight issue, if she feels he is overweight, is bullying. Telling someone to STFU is perfectly acceptable. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one knows the real cause of the bullying. The parent may think it's weight related but it can be more complex than that. The parent may be trying to identify a reason, but it could be caused by any number of reasons.
This is so true. The bully is likely a little fuck-tard like his parents. Those same people that are scolding OP for her son being "fat."
OP, 7th grade doesn't have to be hell. That's what Capitol Hill parents like to tell themselves when they spend their cash on house renovations and fancy vacations instead of tuition.
Latin sucks. Look into Deal or move or pony up the cash. Your kids deserves it.
Anonymous wrote:No one knows the real cause of the bullying. The parent may think it's weight related but it can be more complex than that. The parent may be trying to identify a reason, but it could be caused by any number of reasons.
Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing Washington Latin and yes, it has a bullying culture. The administration refuses to acknowledge that it happens and there are plenty of parents who pretend it isn't happening at well.
"My child loooooves riding the bus. It's so much fun." (Yes, your child is a sadistic little twit and enjoys torturing other kids, so it is true, the bus is a joy for him.)
However, it doesn't have to be the norm in middle school. Just get him out of Latin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:99.99% of children will be teased-- especially in middle school. That too will pass. Being overweight at 12 actually has lifelong consequences.
No, you stop. Do 99.99% of children request to switch schools because they are being teased? The OP didn't ask for your opinion about her child's weight. She asked about bullying.
Yes, I do thin 99.99% of 7th graders want to be in a different school. I know mine does he he doesn't complain about bullying. The age is horrible, he also would like a new family and just declares the other day he doesn't believe in God. Seriously, they are all over the place. That said OP needs to:
1.) transfer her kid to Deal.
2.) help him maintain a healthy weight.
The two aren't tied together. She offered up the info, we get to comment. Don't want comments, don't offer up the info!
Anonymous wrote:Continuing to harangue someone about weight when they have not asked your opinion and you are not the child's physician is, in itself, akin to bullying. This kind of holier-than-thou backseat parenting is deeply offensive.
Ok, just want to make sure I understand - suggesting that in addition to addressing bullying at school it is indeed the mom's responsibility to address the child's weight issue, if she feels he is overweight, is bullying. Telling someone to STFU is perfectly acceptable. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Bullying needs an audience and 9 times out of 10 the bullying is done in the ear-shot of an adult. As this is February and just being revealed only shows he suffered in silence much too long.
To be named the biggest child in a grade level is not hard at all at this rate of obesity but there's a need to squash the teasing.
Just recently, my child was trying out for a dance team and was told that she was too big for the size 4 uniform. My DD wears a size 5/6 but to be told by the adult sponsor that she was too big, hit a sore spot.
Anonymous wrote:The DCUM bullies here are treating the weight thing as a straw man. If the OP just said "my kid is being bullied" -- would it matter what the reason was? You sound like you're rationalizing the abhorrant behavior because there's a possible weight issues. Maybe a victim is transgender. Somewhere on the autism scale -- at what point is it not ok to blame the victim or the victim's concerned parent.
Whatever a "healthy weight" for this child may be is none of your business. You seriously need to STFU
With the exception of one person, no one is rationalizing the behavior of the students. People are suggesting that in addition to addressing the bullying, the mom address the child's weight issue, which is a separate issue of health, regardless of whether he is bullied about it. BTW, really nice and classy, telling someone you disagree with to STFU. You are a complete hypocrite and definitely not one to preach to anyone about bullying.
Continuing to harangue someone about weight when they have not asked your opinion and you are not the child's physician is, in itself, akin to bullying. This kind of holier-than-thou backseat parenting is deeply offensive.
Continuing to harangue someone about weight when they have not asked your opinion and you are not the child's physician is, in itself, akin to bullying. This kind of holier-than-thou backseat parenting is deeply offensive.
Anonymous wrote:The DCUM bullies here are treating the weight thing as a straw man. If the OP just said "my kid is being bullied" -- would it matter what the reason was? You sound like you're rationalizing the abhorrant behavior because there's a possible weight issues. Maybe a victim is transgender. Somewhere on the autism scale -- at what point is it not ok to blame the victim or the victim's concerned parent.
Whatever a "healthy weight" for this child may be is none of your business. You seriously need to STFU
With the exception of one person, no one is rationalizing the behavior of the students. People are suggesting that in addition to addressing the bullying, the mom address the child's weight issue, which is a separate issue of health, regardless of whether he is bullied about it. BTW, really nice and classy, telling someone you disagree with to STFU. You are a complete hypocrite and definitely not one to preach to anyone about bullying.