FROM THE EXPERTS | Beyond Sticks and Stones: Dealing with Severe Cyberbullying
Q&A
with Therapist Julie Guido, Part Two 
Julie, you
mentioned that there was a severe cyberbullying
case that stood out in your work as a school
therapist. Can you tell us about it and what we
can learn from it?
I worked with a
twelfth grader who was bullied in seventh,
eighth and ninth grades to such a degree that
she was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). She had some issues before the
bullying, including anxiety, but the bullying
tipped her over the edge. When she came to my
school, she was showing signs of social
phobia.
This student
was getting harassed via cell phone calls,
texts and instant messages, and rumors were
posted about her on MySpace and Xanga. It was
nonstop.
In the old days
of messages on the bathroom wall, teachers
could see the anger and venom and paint over
them—cyberbullying is something that follows
teens. It is like an invisible force that can
pop up at any time, anywhere.
Checking their
Websites, texts and IMs can become a
masochistic thing that teens do to themselves,
hoping it will change somehow. Parents and
adults must intervene—because how many kids can
exert the kind of self-restraint it takes to
not check what others are doing/saying
about them?
What are the
best ways to respond to bullying, and how did
it work for this student?
We had to start
from scratch: identifying feelings, learning
how to talk about what was really going on and
doing hard work on how to let go of the pain of
her middle school years.
Responses to
bullying generally break down into three
approaches: mediation with adults, standing up
or blocking the aggressor.
The high school senior tried the latter
extremes. Standing up to the bullies backfired.
I worked with her to help her come up with a
decision that she ultimately chose for herself:
she decided to let go of these relationships
and start over. Instead of letting others
control her self-image, she was able—with the
help of adults—to cut all ties. It was
extremely hard.
Now, she’s an
adult and in college. She’s one of the
healthiest people I know. She has had years of
therapy and medication, and has come through it
a very self-aware and hard working young lady.
She knows she can get through
crises. She was in favor of
her story being told for purposes of helping
others.
We’ve had other
situations at the school where the staff didn’t
know about the bullying until it was very
intense; and by then it became too late for
mediation. One tenth-grade student changed
schools, and we as staff felt terrible because
she didn’t get to resolve the bullying. That
will stay with her forever. It was a huge
lesson for the school; there is now more focus
on awareness and prevention.
How can
parents/guardians and schools intervene with
bullies?
First, there
must be compassion for these bullies. They are
hurting and feel the need to hurt back. They
need structure, guidance and swift consequences
with plans for concrete changes. Therapeutic
intervention may be needed to work with bully
and victim respectively.
Parents/guardians and schools can take
away or restrict all luxury items that are used
in bullying—for example, limiting computer
usage to schoolwork (monitored at school and at
home) or curtailing wireless phone privileges.
Depending on the child and the severity and
intent to harm, bullies can be encouraged to
send a sincere letter to the victim
acknowledging responsibility, what it must feel
like to be bullied and lessons learned.
Restricted access to friends who are
“accompanying bullies” would also be indicated
for the bully. These are the
kids giving a bully power and encouragement,
helping to promote a snowball effect.
I would want to
see signs of some empathy or compassion before
letting up on consequences.
Working with the bully to create a plan
that demonstrates to parents/teachers that
he/she “gets it” can work. This is the bully’s
time for a “do-over” of sorts—although you
can’t take away the scars left behind, you can
move forward positively and work on building
more positive, honest relationships in the
future. Follow-through by adults is
crucial.
Adults cannot
intervene if they don’t know about
it. Think about it—as a
parent/guardian, would you want to know if your
son/daughter was bullying someone?
If the answer is “yes” then you also
know that parents need to be more comfortable
communicating with each other and teachers need
to make the time to inform parents if they
suspect more than just a casual conflict
between students.
Tips for Adults
Be Aware of What Your Child is Doing on the Internet.
Teach Empathy and Respect.
Work Through Alternatives.
We must offer reality checks and show teens how to change their actions: “This is wrong, but this is how you can do it differently, this is how you won’t get in trouble,” and “Is this the message you’re trying to send? If so, try it another way because this is what I’m getting from this.”
- With a young child, if he throws a brush at me when I’ve asked him to bring it to me, I know to say, “That’s not okay. You go right back out of the room, bring it in and hand it to me correctly.” We need to do the same with teens. I am constantly asking my teenager to repeat what she has said so that I can hear the words without the disrespect attached. It does work; she gets what she needs when she is able to be respectful and mature.
- Teaching how to listen and communicate at any age gives kids tools both to respond to cyberbullies and to deal with people they may want to bully. Teaching kids to think before responding in life and online is key to stopping the snowball effect that gives cyberbullies their ammunition.
Address the Situation Honestly.
Julie Guido,
LCSW-C, is a therapist who has 15 years of
experience working in middle and high schools
and in private practice with children ages 6 to
18. She lives in Pennsylvania with her husband
and four children.