Jtuk wrote:
I wonder sometimes if the people who were bullying me in school, were actual bullies, or if I was taking playground teasing the wrong way.
League_Girl wrote:
But I wonder how if they were only mean to me and everyone just thought I deserved it. I mean I did have poor social skills and didn't know how to act and had poor impulse control so the way I acted made it look like I was bad and most people don't respect bad people so they treat you as such. That can be hard for someone who has an ASD or a social disorder so that is where "blaming the victim" comes in. Plus I think I may have taken honesty as them being mean to me and kids are honest and they don't say things to be mean. They are just honest and tell it like the way it is and don't make excuses or sugar coat. Some of them do because they were taught to do it and would get in trouble if they hurt Johnny's feelings so they lie to avoid it. I may have also taken their teasing as them being mean to me.
It almost seems like the pressure from others is starting to make you guys think "blame the victim" is okay, too.
Taking teasing the wrong way? The only times I've seen teasing be an okay thing is if a friend is doing it in a friendly manner. If the kids teasing you weren't friends, then of course it comes off as mean. That's especially the case if teasing you was a normal thing- it's more "go along with the crowd." As others here said, it's a matter of keeping themselves from being picked on.
I also had an awful time in school. Third and fourth grades were bad, but in fifth grade it was the worst. There wasn't a single kid in the class that left me alone. That's the year I learned how making fun of others helps one's popularity. There was one boy that got teased on almost as much as I did. I realized that if I picked on him, I got a little more acceptance from the others. However, I felt awful doing it and, honestly, he was better at picking on me than I was at picking on him... so he still managed to rise above me on that "popularity totem pole", so to speak. I accepted my fate as the class loser, but I had a valuable lesson learned.
Human nature causes people to divide others into two groups: "us" and "them". People have a strong desire to get along with "us", and they usually use their shared opposition to "them" in order to achieve it. It's the same technique governments use to rally their people against another country that they want to go to war with. A lot of hardcore religious and political groups also do it. It's incredibly easy to manipulate people with it because it's such a strong impulse. (Somehow, I can't find a name for the phenomenon. However,
Groupthink is a very similar idea. It's also worthwhile to check the other related ideas under "See also" on the bottom of that page.)
So, essentially, all of us who got picked on were pretty much tools to help the rest of the crowd feel a bond towards each other.
They got closer together by driving us away from them. Isn't human nature lovely?