I like the way Louis CK put it in a video someone posted in here recently. When kids bully to someone's face, they see the reaction, and think 'oh, that doesn't feel very good'. When they bully via the net or texts, there's nothing to balance out the 'hit' they scored.
That being said. As a parent, I can't control other people's kids. I find it frustrating that my kids are being taught in school that if anyone's mean to them, then they are victims and prone to suicide. Why would you instill a suicide prone victim ideology in my kids' heads? Why would you tell them how they should feel about being the brunt of bullying? The issue has become too one sided. There is more to dealing with bullying than just dealing with the bully.
Delete your child's online accounts and texting. Allow them to deal with friends via the phone, where you can monitor it and track incoming calls and nothing is 'anonymous'. Tell your kids why it is important to stand tall. Tell them they are valuable. Move if you can. Talk to them about suicide and how it's a permanent solution to a temporary problem. Even the Canadian Mental Health Association people I know are seeing a massive gap in the suicide prevention discussions taking place with youth these days, with parents and teachers laying the responsibility in everyone else's hands to keep kids from killing themselves, so that every time someone commits suicide, it's a massive blame game and witch hunt.
That being said. As a parent, I can't control other people's kids. I find it frustrating that my kids are being taught in school that if anyone's mean to them, then they are victims and prone to suicide. Why would you instill a suicide prone victim ideology in my kids' heads? Why would you tell them how they should feel about being the brunt of bullying? The issue has become too one sided. There is more to dealing with bullying than just dealing with the bully.
Delete your child's online accounts and texting. Allow them to deal with friends via the phone, where you can monitor it and track incoming calls and nothing is 'anonymous'. Tell your kids why it is important to stand tall. Tell them they are valuable. Move if you can. Talk to them about suicide and how it's a permanent solution to a temporary problem. Even the Canadian Mental Health Association people I know are seeing a massive gap in the suicide prevention discussions taking place with youth these days, with parents and teachers laying the responsibility in everyone else's hands to keep kids from killing themselves, so that every time someone commits suicide, it's a massive blame game and witch hunt.