Bully Story
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It started when I was in the Second Grade. I was heavy, a bookworm, and didnt make friends easily. I didnt have any trouble until then. This was the perfect set-up for what started. When the kids started picking on me, I dont exactly remember, but the worst part was that the teacher seemed to join in. At one point, I was accused of something, I dont remember exactly what, but what I do remember is that I didnt do it. All but a few kept telling me that I did, but I still remember that I didnt do it. The worst part was that in order to keep from getting my mouth washed out with soap for lying, I had to lie and say I did do it. In retrospect, I should have asked them to call my Mom, but I was only the second grade, and an adult, my teacher, was telling me I was bad.
My mother knew something was wrong, and even met with my teacher to try and figure it out, but she only got the truth from me about the whole incident a few years ago. Im 40 years old, back then not only was soap a common punishment, but so was corporal punishment, with a paddle. I have no problem with corporal punishment, personally, but, maybe I could have been saved if they had been required to call my mother first. I accidentally stuck my finger down a boys pants, the back part, and he was quick to go to the teacher and told her what I did. I owned up to it, trying to prove my truthfulness, to no avail.
Lesson 1: No matter what I said, no one would believe me. Therefore, I should lie.
Lesson 2: Dont back down when youre right, or didnt do it.
I was held back in the second grade. My second, second grade teacher I suppose was good enough. I dont remember anything particularly bad about it, but my intelligence, and nerd factor, started to show. I was reading and comprehending on the eighth grade level by the time I was in the third grade, college in the fifth. I had a wonderful third grade teacher, how wonderful, I didnt miss a day. I also met Angela and Susan. These two were the popular girls. Future chearleaders and genuinely wonderful people, they told me flat that if I needed help with bullies, let them know, they would take care of it.
My self-esteem had never quite recovered. I still had those who felt I was a prime target, easy to pick on. They called me blubber, Medusa, and other mean names because of my weight. Ive always been heavy. This escalated, first in the sixth grade, I stopped caring. I went to school without showering, or brushing my hair. In the seventh and eighth grade I had moved to a different school and beyond the help of friends. My only solace was my voice. Midway through the fifth grade I discovered that I had a voice no one could call ugly.
The bullies were girls, well call them Carrie and Darlene. They exhibited the classic