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When You Want To Hit A Bully Follow-up

This week I posted a blog titled “When You Want To Hit A Bully” and I just wanted to follow up on the story.

The other day we told my son to hit the kid who had been bullying him for the last year at the bus stop. We felt like we had exhausted all other possibilities. My husband remembered when he was in junior high and a certain boy constantly bullied him. But one day my husband went up to the bully and hit him. After that the bully left him alone. So we felt like the action was worth a try. We hoped that if this child realized that as long as he bullied my son he could get hurt too the bullying would stop.

At school someone told the teacher that my son had hit the bully. Because it was outside of school the Kuna Schools resource officer was called in. The police officer talked to my son and the other child. My son, who is very bright for his age, thought that his dad was going to go to jail for telling him to hit the bully and was almost in tears when he came home. I assured him that wasn’t going to happen.

I also got a call from the resource officer. She told me that because we had told my son to hit the bully that we could actually go to jail. I guess there is a law in Idaho that adults can’t tell a child to hurt another child. Of course we didn’t know that. We were just telling our son that it was time to fight back.

I explained that my son had been bullied for the last year. We had tried going through the school and speaking to the bully’s parents but it hadn’t worked. My son was still being pushed around on a daily basis. She didn’t realize the issues behind the hit. After I explained, her attitude changed.

I also got a call from the vice-principal of my son’s school. I told her that I felt like the school had failed my son. I was also upset that a police officer was involved the one time my son hit someone and the other hundred times my son was pushed around the police weren’t involved. The vice-principal explained that because the event didn’t happen on school grounds they had no jurisdiction so the resource officer was called in. It didn’t really make me feel better. Maybe if the police had been called in earlier the bullying would have stopped and my son would have never had to fight back.

The vice-principal said that she didn’t realize that the bullying was still on going. She promised to follow through better on her end. The child that has been bullying my son has been seen in her office a lot this year. So there are definitely other issues there. The best thing that came out of this is that the school is taking the bullying seriously, when I felt like they never really did before.

It wasn’t easy for my son to hit the bully and he felt bad about it. But at the same time it helped him realize that he wasn’t powerless. Although I don’t think he’ll be hitting another kids unless he gets hit first. It just isn’t in him to be the instigator. Which is fine with me. That’s how we’ve raised him to care about others and follow the rules. But sometimes…

See these related blogs:

Helping Your Child Stand Up To Bullies

Are Parents To Blame For School Bullying?

The Bully Next Door

How Parents Should Deal With School Bullying

This entry was posted in Mothers' (or Fathers') Helpers and tagged , , by Teresa McEntire. Bookmark the permalink.

About Teresa McEntire

Teresa McEntire grew up in Utah the oldest of four children. She currently lives in Kuna, Idaho, near Boise. She and her husband Gene have been married for almost ten years. She has three children Tyler, age six, Alysta, four, and Kelsey, two. She is a stay-at-home mom who loves to scrapbook, read, and of course write. Spending time with her family, including extended family, is a priority. She is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and currently works with the young women. Teresa has a degree in Elementary Education from Utah State University and taught 6th grade before her son was born. She also ran an own in-home daycare for three years. She currently writes educational materials as well as blogs for Families.com. Although her formal education consisted of a variety of child development classes she has found that nothing teaches you better than the real thing. She is constantly learning as her children grow and enjoys sharing that knowledge with her readers.