Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many women embracing victimhood here. It’s one thing for a child to feel helpless or overwhelmed by mean people but as an adult? Know your strength. Avoid the jerks when you can, ignore them when you cannot. And yes, I have had plenty of people be mean to me. I don’t resort to high school tropes to define the situation. You’re better than the jerks.
Actually, you are victim-blaming here by implying that a single individual has the power to avoid abuse by a cohesive group simply by being "better." That's not how bullying works. Bullies have power - that's the very definition of power. They cannot be ignored if they don't want to be. Kids don't commit suicide when they are severely bullied simply because they failed to ignore. You seem like someone lucky enough never to have actually been a victim of real bullying. It's not just someone being mean to you. It's a coordinated effort by a socially powerful group to harm a person with significantly less social status. It is not some insecure kid or a kid with a bad home life. It's typically girls who are fairly popular and more socially adept than their peers. By invalidating the inescapable nature of real mean girl bullying, you trivialize the trauma that real girls experience every day.
DP. If we are talking adults, maybe run for the pool board or be on the PTA or host your own neighborhood party or whatever you are complaining about as overrun by “mean girls” and make those nicer places if you aren’t able to ignore them somehow. These posts are fascinating to me. If you walk around in this world and are a loyal, kind, and inclusive friend you will attract those people. Build the life want to have. A starting point of all women are mean is certainly not going to help.
If I walked around everyday thinking the entire human race was filled with mean people I’d be seriously depressed.
+1. Agree, some people are mean. But the people saying all women are mean? That’s the kind of sh*t that pits women against each other eternally. Total self-own for womankind.
Anonymous wrote:The mean girls are the fast girls and they’re mean for a reason.
Once you understand that, it all starts to make sense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Middle school is tough and girls can be so hurtful and mean for no reason. A bunch of girls experienced it a school sport tryout recently and it was interesting to watch the various reactions. Two girls said nope not joining even if we make it, my own kid got very angry about it and another was very hurt and was in tears.
My point being is one person can experience the exact same behavior and handle it very differently. So just because one person lets it roll off their back doesn’t mean everyone will and we need to support them as individuals.
I have been on my daughter to expand her friend group since entering middle and she has in different ways. She also participates in a sport with a group of girls who don’t attend which always gives her another outlet. Sometimes just listening vent at the injustice of it all is what she needs because that’s who she is. Others may need different types of support.
Why weren’t they not going to join?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many women embracing victimhood here. It’s one thing for a child to feel helpless or overwhelmed by mean people but as an adult? Know your strength. Avoid the jerks when you can, ignore them when you cannot. And yes, I have had plenty of people be mean to me. I don’t resort to high school tropes to define the situation. You’re better than the jerks.
Actually, you are victim-blaming here by implying that a single individual has the power to avoid abuse by a cohesive group simply by being "better." That's not how bullying works. Bullies have power - that's the very definition of power. They cannot be ignored if they don't want to be. Kids don't commit suicide when they are severely bullied simply because they failed to ignore. You seem like someone lucky enough never to have actually been a victim of real bullying. It's not just someone being mean to you. It's a coordinated effort by a socially powerful group to harm a person with significantly less social status. It is not some insecure kid or a kid with a bad home life. It's typically girls who are fairly popular and more socially adept than their peers. By invalidating the inescapable nature of real mean girl bullying, you trivialize the trauma that real girls experience every day.
DP. If we are talking adults, maybe run for the pool board or be on the PTA or host your own neighborhood party or whatever you are complaining about as overrun by “mean girls” and make those nicer places if you aren’t able to ignore them somehow. These posts are fascinating to me. If you walk around in this world and are a loyal, kind, and inclusive friend you will attract those people. Build the life want to have. A starting point of all women are mean is certainly not going to help.
If I walked around everyday thinking the entire human race was filled with mean people I’d be seriously depressed.
I don't actually agree about nice people attracting nice people. Nice people often attract the worst users and self-involved people, and friends who talk behind their back about what a sap/idiot they are.
I wrote what you are responding to. I didn't say "nice", which you seem to be equating to being a doormat and clueless. I said kind. It is kind to be direct and honest with friends and communicate clearly. Kind people can be very good judges of character and have boundaries and all those good things.
I have to think some of the - all the people are so mean - posters have other issues going on in their personality or the way they interact with others and one of those issues is everything is always someone else's fault. If you get to be a middle-aged woman and your experience is all women are awful, time to see a therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Where do y'all work? Because I have literally never encountered mean girl nonsense at work, and I'm 53 and have had a lot of jobs. I've encountered some nonsense, of course. But not the mean girl brand of it. I haven't seen that since 8th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope never changes.
Sororities are no different than MS.
Country Clubs same
Suburban neighborhoods the same.
Workplace same.
Teach your girls to be intelligent kind competative humans and how to ignore the trolls.
Good God. I was/am in all of these and have not experienced “mean girl drama” specific to these places. Have I had women be mean to me? Yes. In varied circumstances, but not work, or my wonderful neighborhood or even our CC. This seems more about you than a universal experience.
Look in the mirror if you want to see what PP is talking about. It you can't see it outside then it's you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope never changes.
Sororities are no different than MS.
Country Clubs same
Suburban neighborhoods the same.
Workplace same.
Teach your girls to be intelligent kind competative humans and how to ignore the trolls.
Good God. I was/am in all of these and have not experienced “mean girl drama” specific to these places. Have I had women be mean to me? Yes. In varied circumstances, but not work, or my wonderful neighborhood or even our CC. This seems more about you than a universal experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many women embracing victimhood here. It’s one thing for a child to feel helpless or overwhelmed by mean people but as an adult? Know your strength. Avoid the jerks when you can, ignore them when you cannot. And yes, I have had plenty of people be mean to me. I don’t resort to high school tropes to define the situation. You’re better than the jerks.
Actually, you are victim-blaming here by implying that a single individual has the power to avoid abuse by a cohesive group simply by being "better." That's not how bullying works. Bullies have power - that's the very definition of power. They cannot be ignored if they don't want to be. Kids don't commit suicide when they are severely bullied simply because they failed to ignore. You seem like someone lucky enough never to have actually been a victim of real bullying. It's not just someone being mean to you. It's a coordinated effort by a socially powerful group to harm a person with significantly less social status. It is not some insecure kid or a kid with a bad home life. It's typically girls who are fairly popular and more socially adept than their peers. By invalidating the inescapable nature of real mean girl bullying, you trivialize the trauma that real girls experience every day.
DP. If we are talking adults, maybe run for the pool board or be on the PTA or host your own neighborhood party or whatever you are complaining about as overrun by “mean girls” and make those nicer places if you aren’t able to ignore them somehow. These posts are fascinating to me. If you walk around in this world and are a loyal, kind, and inclusive friend you will attract those people. Build the life want to have. A starting point of all women are mean is certainly not going to help.
If I walked around everyday thinking the entire human race was filled with mean people I’d be seriously depressed.
I don't actually agree about nice people attracting nice people. Nice people often attract the worst users and self-involved people, and friends who talk behind their back about what a sap/idiot they are.
Anonymous wrote:Middle school is tough and girls can be so hurtful and mean for no reason. A bunch of girls experienced it a school sport tryout recently and it was interesting to watch the various reactions. Two girls said nope not joining even if we make it, my own kid got very angry about it and another was very hurt and was in tears.
My point being is one person can experience the exact same behavior and handle it very differently. So just because one person lets it roll off their back doesn’t mean everyone will and we need to support them as individuals.
I have been on my daughter to expand her friend group since entering middle and she has in different ways. She also participates in a sport with a group of girls who don’t attend which always gives her another outlet. Sometimes just listening vent at the injustice of it all is what she needs because that’s who she is. Others may need different types of support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many women embracing victimhood here. It’s one thing for a child to feel helpless or overwhelmed by mean people but as an adult? Know your strength. Avoid the jerks when you can, ignore them when you cannot. And yes, I have had plenty of people be mean to me. I don’t resort to high school tropes to define the situation. You’re better than the jerks.
Actually, you are victim-blaming here by implying that a single individual has the power to avoid abuse by a cohesive group simply by being "better." That's not how bullying works. Bullies have power - that's the very definition of power. They cannot be ignored if they don't want to be. Kids don't commit suicide when they are severely bullied simply because they failed to ignore. You seem like someone lucky enough never to have actually been a victim of real bullying. It's not just someone being mean to you. It's a coordinated effort by a socially powerful group to harm a person with significantly less social status. It is not some insecure kid or a kid with a bad home life. It's typically girls who are fairly popular and more socially adept than their peers. By invalidating the inescapable nature of real mean girl bullying, you trivialize the trauma that real girls experience every day.
DP. If we are talking adults, maybe run for the pool board or be on the PTA or host your own neighborhood party or whatever you are complaining about as overrun by “mean girls” and make those nicer places if you aren’t able to ignore them somehow. These posts are fascinating to me. If you walk around in this world and are a loyal, kind, and inclusive friend you will attract those people. Build the life want to have. A starting point of all women are mean is certainly not going to help.
If I walked around everyday thinking the entire human race was filled with mean people I’d be seriously depressed.