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Interview With My Bully

Tuesday, Feb 14, 2012 1:00 AM UTC2012-02-14T01:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Interview With My Bully: When I confronted my bully about racism

In seventh grade, Mary's "ching-a-ling" routine scarred me. But years later, she was the one who cried victim

bully

 (Credit: Salon)

Judy Blume, my mentor and friend, told me not to engage with my bully. “Forget her, she isn’t worth it,” she told me. But I had a strange curiosity over what happened to the woman — I’ll call her Mary — who had once been my tormentor. Over the years I’d developed a secret theory of bullies, that they were the ultimate softies, the ones who have to build a fearsome spiked carapace over some sad, sad hurt. It’s that kind of empathy, perhaps, that made me a novelist. And Mary certainly gave me a story to tell.

Bullying, unfortunately, was a part of the warp and weave of my childhood. I grew up in northern Minnesota in the ’70s, where my Asian family was the only color in a sea of Scandinavians. When I was in second grade, a crew-cutted boy shoved me against some metal monkey bars, cracking the back of my head open.

But the most difficult time came when I entered junior high. I was underweight, bookish, bespectacled. Gym class was a convergence of all my anxieties. The other girls were tall with pretty hair that feathered and training bras, while I had no breasts and not even an undershirt for camouflage underneath the one-piece uniforms that looked like a baby’s onesie.

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Marie Myung-Ok Lee’s essays have appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Guardian, The Washington Post, and she is regular contributor to Slate. She is the author of the novel Somebody’s Daughter and teaches creative writing at Brown University. Find her on Twitter @MarieMyungOkLee and on FacebookMore Marie Myung-Ok Lee

Tuesday, Nov 15, 2011 1:00 AM UTC2011-11-15T01:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Interview With My Bully: The mean girl I can’t forget

My bully comes clean, 30 years later: "I was told I was special, so I acted special and better than others"

Interview with my bully

Interview your own bully -- and send it to Salon. Read how here.

A week before the seventh grade, my family moved for the 13th time. My dad was in the oil business, and we left Indonesia, where I’d had friends, for a small Southern town, where I had none. My only companion dressed exclusively in navy culottes and white button-down shirts, her wardrobe compliments of her Pentecostal religion. We were practically the only two girls without The Hairdo: a feathered Farrah Fawcett cut that necessitated a cloud of Aqua Net hairspray to tame it in Louisiana’s humidity.

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Sue Sanders' essays have appeared in national and local magazines and newspapers. Her stories have been included in the anthologies "Ask Me About My Divorce" and "Women Reinvented." She lives in Portland, Oregon with her stash of books -- not a parenting guide among them.  More Sue Sanders

Thursday, Nov 10, 2011 1:00 AM UTC2011-11-10T01:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Interview With My Bully: I admit it — I was a bully

I was an insecure middle schooler who picked on my peers. Now, I'm doing something villains rarely do: Apologizing

Interview with my bully

Valerie Jones was an earnest sixth-grader with glasses, braces and a bladder control problem. We met in homeroom on the first day of middle school, both new and friendless, having just left the womb of elementary school. I chatted her up and she seemed grateful to have made a social connection. But after I made newer and cooler friends, I used that connection to crush her.

Once, after a particularly long social studies lecture, it became clear from the growing dark spot on her skirt and her uncomfortable shifting that Valerie had wet her pants. (Valerie is not her real name, by the way. I’ve changed names to protect the real people.) I sidled up next to her and whispered, “Did you have an accident? It’s OK, you can tell me.” After she finally admitted she had, I told everyone.

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Mary O’Regan is a senior fashion editor at METRO magazine, editor-in-chief of Arizona Bride, Wisconsin Bride and Minnesota Bride magazines, and has a style blog at ArtOfWore.com.  More Mary O'Regan

Thursday, Oct 27, 2011 10:30 PM UTC2011-10-27T22:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Interview With My Bully: The bully who asked for forgiveness

Ryan wasn't the only kid who tormented me. But he was the only one brave enough to speak to me about it

Interview with my bully

Interview your own bully -- and send it to Salon. Read how here.

No one person ever led the bullying I experienced as a child. When I try to remember that time in my life, I think of a mob of faces, and of the mercy I hoped for but never received.

I grew up as a fat girl in an unforgiving new money suburb. One time, I was going to play with a younger friend from my block when a group of girls surrounded us, some shoving me, some yelling “Moose!” (Moose was the nickname that plagued me throughout school, following me until I left for college.) The girl leading the mob, Stacy, had one year and at least four inches on me. Her golden good looks would’ve made her pretty if not for the furious expression she wore whenever she caught sight of me. I broke through the circle of screaming girls and ran till I got home. I never told anyone, though the violence frightened me.

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Rebecca Golden, author of "Butterbabe: The True Adventures of a 40-Stone Outsider" (Random House UK), lives and writes in Toledo, Ohio.  More Rebecca Golden

Thursday, Oct 13, 2011 12:00 AM UTC2011-10-13T00:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Interview With My Bully: The bully who denied it

Back in high school, Veronica made my life hell. She doesn't remember it that way. Is it possible we're both right?

Interview With My Bully

Interview your own bully -- and send it to Salon. Read how here.

This article made possible by Salon Core members.

One sad autumn a couple of years ago, I wrote two pieces, similar in tone, about being absolutely friendless in middle school and high school. They were written weeks apart but published within hours of each other. That week, everyone felt bad for me.

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Taffy Brodesser-Akner has written for the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Self, Redbook, and other publications.   More Taffy Brodesser-Akner

Thursday, Oct 6, 2011 12:00 AM UTC2011-10-06T00:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

What my childhood bully taught me

I thought Ted picked on me because I was gay. Over 40 years later, I found out the real reason

Interview with my bully

 (Credit: Salon)

A longer version of this piece originally appeared on Bert Baruch Wylen's Open Salon blog. The name of Bert's bully has been changed to protect his privacy. Interview your own bully -- and send it to Salon. Read how here.

My gut clenched when I saw the Facebook friend request from Ted, the guy who bullied me through junior high and high school. Four years of hell.

I don’t blame my later struggles with alcoholism and drug abuse on the considerable bullying I received as a kid, but that, combined with parental violence at home, contributed to the self-loathing I used to justify my bad behavior. I found myself wondering whether Ted could somehow harm me, more than 40 years later.

I accepted the friend request. Ted lived in Tennessee, hundreds of miles from my Pennsylvania home. I felt fully capable of defending myself through an electronic medium. Words had become my weapon. My problem was physical violence. Maybe I finally had the advantage.

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  More Bert Baruch Wylen

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