Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Report this to the police today!
Once the report is done inform the school.
Empower your daughter to defend herself, hit, scream or kick him in the balls if he gropes her again.
No! The school cannot employ restorative justice if you involve the police.
Where is your concern for the boy who did this?
I'm guessing you're joking? Restorative justice is a joke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Report this to the police today!
Once the report is done inform the school.
Empower your daughter to defend herself, hit, scream or kick him in the balls if he gropes her again.
No! The school cannot employ restorative justice if you involve the police.
Where is your concern for the boy who did this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Report this to the police today!
Once the report is done inform the school.
Empower your daughter to defend herself, hit, scream or kick him in the balls if he gropes her again.
No! The school cannot employ restorative justice if you involve the police.
Where is your concern for the boy who did this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WTF. This is sexual assault. Not only do you tell the school, you tell the police.
TikTok encourages this; it is no big deal to kids.
The school sent us this warning about girls being sexually assaulted at the request of TikTok:
“Dear Families,
We have been made aware of a series of new monthly challenges that have been shared across the social media platform TikTok. Last month the “Devious Licks” challenge emerged, and students committed acts of vandalism on school property. Now, these challenges are escalating and harming people.
Here is the full list:
September: Vandalize school bathrooms
October: Smack a staff member
November: Kiss your friend’s girlfriend at school
December: Deck the halls and show your *****
January: Jab a breast
February: Mess up school signs
I want to be clear, these are not fun, harmless challenges. These are crimes with very serious consequences. Students who commit these acts face disciplinary action under the Student Rights and Responsibilities, and possible criminal charges.
Please continue to talk with your children about the serious nature of these acts and the consequences they will face if they participate.
I believe that by working together, we can make sure students and staff are learning and working together in a safe environment. Thank you for your support.
Sincerely,
Scott Brabrand
Superintendent”
Some of us actually read the emails the school sends out.
Anonymous wrote:Report this to the police today!
Once the report is done inform the school.
Empower your daughter to defend herself, hit, scream or kick him in the balls if he gropes her again.
Anonymous wrote:The next time somebody assaults her (and there will be a next time), she needs to grab hold of them, hang on until she is dragged off, and in the meantime do everything she possibly can to visibly and painfully injure the attacker, all the while screaming “stop molesting me” at the top of her lungs. Practice gently at home. Get the therapist involved. She is exuding “victim” signals. That needs to change. And training to defend herself will help her depression too. Look up DC IMPACT, which offers self defense classes for women that include the opportunity to pound the hell out of a padded attacker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The “devious licks” thing is old, I remember getting the same thing a few years ago and some idiot kid actually vandalized a schoo bathroom and “blamed it on TikTok”.
I don’t let my kids go in tiktok.
Op, please speak with the school immediately and advocate for your child. Simply because she is shy and doesn’t want a fuss made doesn’t mean she needs to sit back and take abuse and assault. And this is assault. Please get her help!
Just FYI - don't be naive. If your kids have access to YouTube, then they're seeing every single thing posted on TikTok.
I’m not naive. They don’t have access to YouTube either unless it’s with a parent’s direct approval and for a school or extracurricular assignment.
There are ways to keep your kids off TikTok and my kids are fine with it. They are not interested in being fed misinformation.
Just curious, how old are your kids? Do they have phones? Do their friends?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The “devious licks” thing is old, I remember getting the same thing a few years ago and some idiot kid actually vandalized a schoo bathroom and “blamed it on TikTok”.
I don’t let my kids go in tiktok.
Op, please speak with the school immediately and advocate for your child. Simply because she is shy and doesn’t want a fuss made doesn’t mean she needs to sit back and take abuse and assault. And this is assault. Please get her help!
Just FYI - don't be naive. If your kids have access to YouTube, then they're seeing every single thing posted on TikTok.
I’m not naive. They don’t have access to YouTube either unless it’s with a parent’s direct approval and for a school or extracurricular assignment.
There are ways to keep your kids off TikTok and my kids are fine with it. They are not interested in being fed misinformation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to give you some insight into what goes through a shy depressed girls brain when she is being sexually harassed like this. I was your daughter, and I was sexually harassed repeatedly in my teens and twenties. In my teens a swim teammate (boy, it was coed) pulled my swimsuit down around my waist every single day for weeks. I was too embarrassed to ask my mom for a new “swim team” type suit and wore my beach suit. He would swim up behind me. Everyone knew, no one did anything.
I was big and strong. I could have decked the kid, held him underwater, kicked him in the nuts. I did all those things to my big brother! But all I wanted to do was disappear. Having attention called to me was more painful than the harassment. There is also a voice in your head that says “maybe this is okay - maybe he’s allowed to do this - maybe if I say something everyone will laugh at me for making a fuss.” That voice in my head allowed me to be groped on buses, trains, streets and airplanes for the next 10 years.
That voice prevented me from saying a decisive clear NO in my 20s when I didn’t want to sleep with an ex boyfriend who invited me over for a movie.
You don’t need to get her self defense class, though I’m sure that is great. You need to figure out how to change the voice in her head that says other people have rights to her body, and that people paying attention to her will humiliate her. That’s what is preventing her from standing up for herself.
Good luck to you and your daughter, OP.
Really sorry for your experience. And thank you, everyone suggesting OP's DD react and yell and deck the abuser really don't understand the internal struggle and voices and twisted oppressive voices that are baked into society even today for girls that make it especially hard for a "private, anxious" girl to establish clear boundaries and say "No!" Thanks for sharing your perspective, hope you're ok & able to stop abusers in their tracks with you now. Or that you're further along than before.
Thanks, PP. I am well. I’m 50 now, and it’s a long time ago. The memories are old and don’t normally occur to me, but when they do I still feel a burning anger. I’m one of those women who others thing “that could never have happened to her, she’s so strong and confident.” I wasn’t when I was young, but I got there. I’m sure OP’s daughter will too, with time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wanted to give you some insight into what goes through a shy depressed girls brain when she is being sexually harassed like this. I was your daughter, and I was sexually harassed repeatedly in my teens and twenties. In my teens a swim teammate (boy, it was coed) pulled my swimsuit down around my waist every single day for weeks. I was too embarrassed to ask my mom for a new “swim team” type suit and wore my beach suit. He would swim up behind me. Everyone knew, no one did anything.
I was big and strong. I could have decked the kid, held him underwater, kicked him in the nuts. I did all those things to my big brother! But all I wanted to do was disappear. Having attention called to me was more painful than the harassment. There is also a voice in your head that says “maybe this is okay - maybe he’s allowed to do this - maybe if I say something everyone will laugh at me for making a fuss.” That voice in my head allowed me to be groped on buses, trains, streets and airplanes for the next 10 years.
That voice prevented me from saying a decisive clear NO in my 20s when I didn’t want to sleep with an ex boyfriend who invited me over for a movie.
You don’t need to get her self defense class, though I’m sure that is great. You need to figure out how to change the voice in her head that says other people have rights to her body, and that people paying attention to her will humiliate her. That’s what is preventing her from standing up for herself.
Good luck to you and your daughter, OP.
Really sorry for your experience. And thank you, everyone suggesting OP's DD react and yell and deck the abuser really don't understand the internal struggle and voices and twisted oppressive voices that are baked into society even today for girls that make it especially hard for a "private, anxious" girl to establish clear boundaries and say "No!" Thanks for sharing your perspective, hope you're ok & able to stop abusers in their tracks with you now. Or that you're further along than before.
Thanks, PP. I am well. I’m 50 now, and it’s a long time ago. The memories are old and don’t normally occur to me, but when they do I still feel a burning anger. I’m one of those women who others thing “that could never have happened to her, she’s so strong and confident.” I wasn’t when I was young, but I got there. I’m sure OP’s daughter will too, with time.