Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are very brave to post here. The fact that you are bothered by the behavior and aren’t denying your daughter’s role tells me that you’re a good parent. So many people would just sweep it under the rug. I’d reach out to the camp director to find out how your daughter can make amends. I’d also keep in mind that your daughter may be remorseful or she may simply be worried about the consequences. I think a few therapy sessions could be helpful. The fact you care to take action suggests you’ll find a way to make this a teachable experience. But I probably wouldn’t send her back next year.
I agree - you are brave to post.
Nothing brave about raising a bully then sending it away to an unsupervised camp to terrorize other children.
Anonymous wrote:I would never let her go back to that camp - what a failure on their part to monitor or attempt to rectify the situation. That they never even contacted you! That poor girl. They are not a safe place for girls, your daughter included.
I agree your daughter seems afraid of the consequences rather than sorry for hurting the girl. Perhaps that is normal at 14? I wouldn't punish her for her lack of empathy and remorse. I would talk to her a lot more and be way more present in her life. Your time left to guide her is short -less than 2 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our youngest just returned home from sleepaway camp. Something was off immediately. She’s been there for years, it’s a very reputable all-girls camp and we have only heard positive. However this year, she came home and was in tears over whether or not we were called by the director, and if I heard “what happened,” and worried about whether she and her friends will be allowed to come back. We did not hear a peep from camp staff.
The most I can make sense of is that a girl left early due to some pretty serious bullying, and my daughter definitely seems less than innocent in it all and now quite remorseful. She claims she was mostly a bystander, but the few things she’s shared are horrible (a long time friends of hers telling the girl that she should go kill herself, telling her she shouldn’t eat because she is fat just to mess with her because she wasn’t fat at all, and the list goes on). What can I do to get her talking to someone and make sure she can take the steps necessary to learn from this and hopefully repair with who she hurt? Is there a therapist that specializes in this? Should the camp have told us if a girl was bullied so bad she had to go home especially if my kid was bullying? I’m wondering if we even bother sending her back. I’m honestly so ashamed and embarrassed.
I’m sorry you are having to navigate this, OP. I’m wishing you and DD peace and as good an outcome as possible for all here.
To every other parent out there: the part in bold? It is commonplace on your children’s social media. What the OP described? It should not shock you; it’s what kids do to each other now, because they have access to social.
It is far easier to say to another child “you should kill yourself,” when it is not face to face. Use Snapchat, and you are unlikely to get caught. Yes, I fully realize in OP’s case it likely was said to her face-to-face. But,
- kids are learning this through social media use. It is not like it was when you were a teen / tween.
I’m pretty sure we all know that. What is your point?
OP circling back. Actually no, I did not know that. I had no idea that it is common for kids to tell each other to kill themselves. I am obviously embarking on a huge overhaul of social media and cell phone usage. I think my husband and I are recognizing we have been incredibly naive and too hands off in the connections our child is making. She is definitely not going back. And I am heartbroken for this girl who got targeted, who from what I am now finding out, was from what it sounds like a perfectly kind and sweet new kid to camp at an age where most kids are not new to camp. My daughter said that it was so bad the camp tried moving the girl to a different bunk a week in, but that the girl left the next day anyways. This camp NEVER changes bunks so I am guessing without even hearing back yet from director that it was bad. Currently making my daughter come up with an apology letter, and waiting to decide how forthcoming to be with the camp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would offer the family of the bullied girl to pay for group counseling so your own daughter can get it off her chest and the bullied girl can get the apologies. Offer to pay for whatever the therapist decides the victim needs before and after the apology therapy session.
This is a ridiculous suggestion. How do you know the other child even lives in the same area?
And don’t dump this on “therapy.” OP and her DH have a responsibility as parents to handle their daughter.
Geography is not a limiting factor to what I’m suggesting.
Both girls need support. The victim and the one wracked with guilt. I don’t think parental “handling”, by which I’m guessing you mean punishment, is any more useful to the remorseful than being sent home was to the victim. Now the other bullies who went home carefree without regrets or remorse probably do need some handling.
The one “wracked with guilt,” aka OPs daughter, needs a swift kick to the backside, among other things. She does not need “therapy.” She needs her parents to deal with her so that this never happens again.
Anonymous wrote:Our youngest just returned home from sleepaway camp. Something was off immediately. She’s been there for years, it’s a very reputable all-girls camp and we have only heard positive. However this year, she came home and was in tears over whether or not we were called by the director, and if I heard “what happened,” and worried about whether she and her friends will be allowed to come back. We did not hear a peep from camp staff.
The most I can make sense of is that a girl left early due to some pretty serious bullying, and my daughter definitely seems less than innocent in it all and now quite remorseful. She claims she was mostly a bystander, but the few things she’s shared are horrible (a long time friends of hers telling the girl that she should go kill herself, telling her she shouldn’t eat because she is fat just to mess with her because she wasn’t fat at all, and the list goes on). What can I do to get her talking to someone and make sure she can take the steps necessary to learn from this and hopefully repair with who she hurt? Is there a therapist that specializes in this? Should the camp have told us if a girl was bullied so bad she had to go home especially if my kid was bullying? I’m wondering if we even bother sending her back. I’m honestly so ashamed and embarrassed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are very brave to post here. The fact that you are bothered by the behavior and aren’t denying your daughter’s role tells me that you’re a good parent. So many people would just sweep it under the rug. I’d reach out to the camp director to find out how your daughter can make amends. I’d also keep in mind that your daughter may be remorseful or she may simply be worried about the consequences. I think a few therapy sessions could be helpful. The fact you care to take action suggests you’ll find a way to make this a teachable experience. But I probably wouldn’t send her back next year.
I agree - you are brave to post.