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It Gets Better: Beyond the Bully

edward gorey alphagorey

Illustration by Edward Gorey

I remember seeing the series of illustrations, where this picture came from, when I was very young. The series is called Alphagorey and it lists all the ways little kids perish, their names moving through the alphabet one by one. Lonely Neville, here on the left, stayed most persistent in my brain. The idea that a little boy could die from sheer loneliness, it was chilling and captivating at the same time. I wondered how it was possible, but I was young then and had no idea how close I was to finding out. You see, I can only remember this illustration from my youth now because I survived my youth to begin with and the terrible bullying and intimidation that went with it.

In recent weeks we have seen a growing number of young teen suicides, mainly dealing with LGBT youth, who are choosing to take their own lives instead of continuing as the verbal and physical punching bag for school bullies (Seth Walsh, Tyler Clementi, Raymond Chase, Billy Lucas, Asher Brown). My personal situations may not match the exact words being used in these disgusting displays of social brutality, but the words are only the handle of the weapon, the intent is the blade which cuts deeply and tries to tell us all that we are not right, we are not normal and we are not good enough to live among what our attackers feel is the “majority”. Nothing could be further from the truth and if you’re the object of bullying right now it may not seem like there is a light anywhere to be seen, but you have to trust me, it’s there just beyond those dark days. Let me share with you so you can see where I am coming from.

I was a really scrawny and tiny kid growing up, much smaller than everyone else, even some of the girls. On top of that the one thing I inherited from my father was ears that pop out like they are trying to run away from my head. I became the class clown, made all the big kids laugh in an effort to keep them off my case. This worked well for the early years of elementary school, but then a new kid transferred in who really wasn’t much for comedy. That began three years of intense intimidation, extortion, constant threats of violence and a complex combination of mental and emotional abuse. The only solace, which was a sad one indeed, was my best friend at the time was being bullied by the same kid, so we had only each other’s small shoulders to lean on during the worst moments. The torment didn’t end until my last year in elementary school when another new kid, a bigger new kid, came to our school. Luckily, he loved to laugh at my jokes. He became my protector and the bully was quickly less interested in me and my friend.

Alone, that might not be that bad in the grand scheme of things, but bullying followed me into high school as well. I was born Jewish in a mainly Catholic area of New Bedford, MA, a mixture of Irish and Portuguese denominations. When I went to synagogue as a child I was only one of two kids who didn’t live in the neighboring town of North Dartmouth (the only other one came from Fairhaven). I was already a member of the minority in public school and in Hebrew school, treated as such by members of each. In Hebrew school I was looked at as the poor white trash townie kid who didn’t have the money to live where the upper class Jews were, while in public high school I was taunted daily in class by someone who felt it was his duty to routinely interrogate me on why I killed his lord and savior. The daily abuse eventually took a toll when I decided to start playing sick instead of going to school. One day led to two, which led to three and eventually I had been out for nearly three weeks straight. I developed a psychological fear of going back to school and what was once an imaginary condition had become full blown reality. I couldn’t even get in the car to head to school without launching into a fit of dry heaving and choking. Finally I had to go in, just for an appointment with the guidance counselor to talk about my options, which were either get back into class and not miss any more days or be left behind. To me, being left behind was not a bad option, but my mom felt otherwise, and rightly so. Once the meeting was over my mother told me I had to stay there and go to class because she wasn’t allowed to take me off school property without just cause. Crying nearly as much as I was, she left me in the stairway of my building, hoping I would calm down once she was gone. I descended into a near nervous breakdown and hid beneath the stairs for two more class periods. Some kids noticed me between periods, but mostly they just left me alone. The next day I went back to that same counselor and told her that because of a loophole I found in the student handbook, she had to transfer me out of the class with the bully immediately. Even though we both knew the reasoning was a lie, she went along with it. I moved out of the class and was able to mostly avoid confrontation with that particular bully for the rest of my time at high school.

Now, I know this is a long post, but I wanted to try and share the little bit of my experiences with bullies and put it out there for anyone that might need to hear it, it does get better. I know what I went through is probably a shadow of what these LGBT kids are going through today, especially in a society where one side is marching, whooping and hollering for equality, while the other side is passing one law after another denigrating gays as a lower class of human. For those old enough to watch the news, it’s even worse when they hear about socially legitimate bullies like Michigan Assistant Attorney General Andrew Shirvell and his hate-filled quest to demonize Chris Armstrong, the first openly gay student body president of the University of Michigan (UPDATE: Shirvell has now been banned from the college campus and taken a leave of absence from his office), or Senator Jim DeMint, who argues that homosexuals and unmarried pregnant women shouldn’t be hired as teachers because they aren’t morally qualified. Lastly, there is Carl Paladino, Tea Party-backed nominee for Governor of New York, who just stated in a campaign speech: “I don’t want them [our children] brainwashed into thinking that homosexuality is an equally valid and successful option — it isn’t…”

It can be hard to see the forest through the trees, but there is another side, a heather-filled field you can stand in and feel the wind rush through your outstretched fingers. You will be able to look back at that dark forest and know you made it out the other side. Suicide, while quick, is far from painless, especially to those you leave behind who care, love and cherish you for exactly who you are. Due to the recent escalation of child suicides, many in the public eye have been standing up and stepping out, making their voices heard in a variety of campaigns, It Gets Better, The Trevor Project and other methods. Here is only a taste of it: Jay Manuel, Dave Navarro, Adrianne Curry, Ryan Murphy, Sia, Sarah Silverman, Daniel Radcliffe, Neil Patrick Harris, Anne Hathaway, Dane Cook, Tim Gunn, Cyndi Lauper, Ke$ha, Zachary Quinto, . Beyond that chorus of positive energy, there are also a number of groups out there designed specifically for those who might even begin to contemplate taking their own life. I am a huge supporter of To Write Love on Her Arms, who just passed four years of amazing work helping at-risk youth and getting the message out there about suicide prevention.

Please, feel free to spread this story as far as you like, or write about your own experiences with bullying. We need to do everything we can to show these kids that they are not alone and they have another way out. Thank you in advance.

Posted 1 year, 3 months ago at 2:19 pm.

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Human Rights Campaign

hrc-logo.gif The Human Rights Campaign represents a grassroots force of more than 700,000 members and supporters nationwide. As the largest national gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender civil rights organization, HRC envisions an America where GLBT people are ensured of their basic equal rights, and can be open, honest and safe at home, at work and in the community.

Click on the pic to learn more and donate.

Posted 2 years, 10 months ago at 5:21 am.

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Daily Musings 3/6

1 – Foamy is back, people. Let the rejoicing begin promptly. :)

2 – Maybe I find this amusing since I also have a line of t-shirts, but there is no doubt American Apparel’s advertising has always been borderline porn. The weird part is it’s really awkward 70′s style porn, like no one is happy to be taking part in it. So in essence, their awkwardness and possible repressed feelings from doing those shoots makes this parody video funny. I guess that’s something. [via FantasticBlognanza]

3 – You know what happens when races get too close to call? The person least confident of winning starts whining and complaining about the race being unfair. Hillary Clinton is pushing for Florida and Michigan to get their delegates in the race, which are at the moment not counted since both states violated Democratic Party rules and moved their primaries up into January. Both state knew what the ramifications were when they made the move and are only rallying about it now because the race is incredibly close. Clinton is stumping for the rights of the states and those “unheard voters” only because everyone else skipped campaigning there except her, so she won both those states. If they get added back into the count, Clinton will get a huge boost and it will also be completely unfair. The more I read about this, the more this sounds like a Bush move. Way to show you’re the candidate for change, Hillary. [via CNN]

4 – Possible good news, Swayze fans: His own doctors came out yesterday to confirm that he is battling Pancreatic Cancer, but they report that he is only inflicted with a small amount of the disease and the dire proclamations made yesterday are far from the actual diagnosis. In this case, I am in full agreement with Perez Hilton and I think we should all buy and download Swayze’s song She’s Like the Wind off ITunes and push it back into the Top 10 as a sign of support. Help perk up Dalton!!! [via People and Perez Hilton]

5 – These USB batteries could the coolest new tech trinkets I’ve seen in a very long time. The people who thought this up need to stop thinking so much and give me some of that brain power. Do they even know how long it takes me to type these things? IQ Hogs!! [via JoshSpear]

6 – Ashton Kutcher could be an evil mastermind. It turns out that he has been secretly filming a new show, in Punk’d style, but this time he is not trying to fool the celebs, but the paparazzi. The show will set up ridiculous things for the photogs to run around, freak out about and waste tons of money and time printing in their daily gossip rags, only to be exposed later as being completely duped. If you have heard rumors of Paris Hilton walking around with a spiritual guide looking like an extra from Enter the Dragon, that would one of Kutcher’s masterpieces at work. I hate to admit it, but he could be kinda brilliant. [via WWTDD]

7 – It turns out that Buffy may be gone from our TV sets, but she is living on in the comic book world and inside that six-color-press universe, she might be playing for both teams. If they had only made Sarah Michelle Gellar go down this road with Eliza Dushku on the show, honestly, rating through the roof! (not that I had any problem with Alyson Hannigan blazing the path for her, that was equally fantastic) [via Perez Hilton]

8 – This is my first attempt at posting multiple thumbnails in one post, but this is worth it. They have just released the first shots of the actors in full Watchmen costume for each of their characters. I am personally excited by this because I happen to have the honor of being friends with Malin Akerman, playing Silk Spectre. The pics are incredibly rad and only boost my confidence that Zack Snyder will make this film utterly bad-ass.

watchmencomedian.jpg watchmenniteowl.jpgwatchmenozymandias.jpgwatchmenrorschach.jpgwatchmensilkspectre.jpg

9 – Another clever group of people have found a way to continue the parody cycle for The Bourne Ultimatum. Here’s the newest volley, The Waldo Ultimatum:

10 – I posted this video once in my old MySpace blog, but this is making the rounds again and I think it highly worth mentioning one more time. Here is the Latvian Cello Choir performing Europe’s rock classic “The Final Countdown”:

Posted 3 years, 11 months ago at 10:56 am.

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