Bullying is a symptom, can we address it at its cause?
Bullying. I’ve been hearing a bit about bulling lately, chiefly about legislation, laws and rules in response to bullying. My heart goes out to all the children who are or have been victims of bullying, and to their families, especially to the families of those children who have taken their own lives. A tragedy I would not wish upon anyone. However, I really wonder if laws and legislation can prevent bullying and if treating bulling as its own isolated problem only covers up the symptoms without true healing. I want to look at the cause, the root, the source, to examine the conditions in our collective culture and society that creates bullies, that fosters bullies in the first place.
Bullies are not born bullies. No one looks at their new born baby and says, “yep, this one’s gonna be a bully”.
If we as a culture have a bullying problem, then I think it is our collective responsibility to examine and understand what in us, in our society and culture has created conditions that foster bullies. If we just make laws against bullying without examining what created the behavior in the first place, how are we really addressing the issue of bullying from the source? I believe that kids who bully also have a story, a need, a pain. In a way my heart goes out also to the bully because I sincerely believe that meanness and the intentional hurting of others can only emerge out of one’s own pain.
I originally wrote the above reflections in July of 2011. Today I am pleased to say that I am involved with an organization- Social Harmony- that reflects these views and works to transform the culture and conditions in schools that contribute to bullying. We support schools to create an environment that moves the paradigm of addressing bulling from punishment to understanding and healing- to really understand what needs the bully is also trying to meet and to explore ways that those needs can be met without doing harm.
Beyond that, we aren’t just looking at dealing with bullying and the results of bullying, we are working to create a culture in which conflicts can be resolved without winners and losers, where people (children in particular, but also teachers and parents) have a sense that their needs matter and that their voices are heard.
I have chosen to delete the rest of this post, as I realize from some responses and some feedback that it is not adequately addressing and responding to the severity of bullying or properly representing the power of Social Harmony to address those issues. I am recognizing that I assumed (inaccurately in some cases) that my readers already understand the paradigm in which I am operating. I realize more needs to be written about why it is so important to move from Punishment to Healing and not just what it looks like when we do. More will be forthcoming on these topics. Stay posted.
Please share comments, thoughts, experiences and reflections below. If this provides inspiration, insight or food for thought, then share it with your friends so they can engage with these ideas too.
The Social Harmony project looks so useful. I must say though, that the examples you give seam to be out of touch with reality and in the minority with regards to why kids bully. I believe that the majority have been taught to bully by their fathers and perhaps to a lesser extent even by their mothers. They have a tough guy mentality because of their parents insecurities. Also, rarely do bullies think they are “just playing” like they do with their brothers. I believe that most of the time kids who bully clearly know what they are doing – harming others because they can. I have witnessed bullying that was aggressive, unprovoked, and clearly had the intention to do harm. So, I believe, a holistic approach would embrace both social harmony issues and anti-bullying policy.
Hi Mario,
Humm, interesting food for thought. Sure, these aren’t the most blatant bullying examples, what I wanted to illustrate is that behind the behavior is a need, is something going on and if we miss what’s really going on then we don’t really solve the problem.
I’m not sure I entirely agree with what you’ve written about why people bully and the cause of bullying. There are plenty of reasons that kids bully, sure parenting could have something to do with it, but the mentality that there are some rotten eggs that just need to be punished is not my experience. There are some kids that are so far removed from their ability to have empathy that it becomes necessary to keep them from doing harm while they can also be helped. In Social Harmony parents are also part of the equation and involved in the process.
A lot of people get scared when we talk about these kinds of approaches thinking that kids are going to get away with murder so to speak. What research shows though, is that punishment and zero tolerance actually have limited effectiveness often just driving the behavior underground and making it less visible. In the the Social Harmony approach, we don’t give up on discipline, what we’re doing is going a step beyond to really solve the issues at their root. If a kid is unwilling or unable to cooperate or participate in a Social Harmony process then the school’s discipline policy would still take effect.
Hi Elana. I’m glad to hear of your work on Social Harmony and in relation to bullying. And, I want to bring to your, and others’ attention, the work of Canadian psychologist Gordon Neufeld, who has spent many years studying bullying first hand, and who has developed understandings that seem potentially very valuable to anyone wanting to transform the phenomenon of bullying. I’m still trying to figure out how to integrate his ideas with the insights offered by Nonviolent Communication. And, his understandings are even harder to integrate with punitive approaches to bullying. Neufeld says that bullying inevitably arises when two complexes of behavior are present in a person and are not addressed in a way that matches the underlying dynamics: (1) a desire to “win” or “dominate”/be the “alpha” in all situations, and (2) a profound insensitivity to emotional stimuli in themselves and in others. Neufeld says that in isolation either of these complexes or syndromes doesn’t necessarily lead to harming others, but that when they come together, a person will tend to act in ways that involve dominating others by exploiting their vulnerability. (Which suggests that some behavior meant to encourage empathy may be tricky to get right when bullying is present.) The part of this story that is about the second point very much aligns with what I hear you saying about healing rather than punishment being the answer. Neufeld believes that those who bully have become numb because at some point their experienced a level of vulnerability in themselves that was too painful to bear, and their system took emergency measures to protect them, shutting down many of the capacities that others have easy access to. One implication of this is that punishing bullies is completely ineffective. Their protective numbing means that punishments are not experienced in a way that provides any incentives to change; and punishment reproduces the conditions that lead to emotional numbness in the first place, potentially making that condition, and any associate bullying, even worse. The issues around social dominance are the part of Neufeld’s analysis that I’ve found the most challenging to assimilate, though I believe there is something important in what he is saying. Part of his analysis, and his experience, is that those who bully are typically in setting where they can be socially dominant–be in charge of others well-being (which they don’t do in a positive way) rather than have others care for them (which those who bully experience a tragic deficit of). Children who act as bullies typically do so when there are no adults around or when adults allow themselves to play a secondary role to the the child. In this analysis, the failure of adults to be dominant in a healthy mature way is part of the problem that creates the conditions that foster bullying. Yet, what Neufeld wants adults to do has a huge component of nurturance to it, so it’s not what talk of “being the adult” or “being the alpha” may evoke for some people. Anyway, Neufeld’s framework is a way of supporting insight into the dynamics around bullying that seems to me very rich and deep (beyond what even a long comment like this can convey) and significant, and I commend it to your attention. Neufeld’s work is just one example of work showing that those who “cause trouble” typically have had their lives shaped by deep trauma, and ultimately respond much better to the right sort of nurturance, and the creation of safe “containers”, than they do to punitive approaches. (You might also Google Lincoln High School in Walla Walla, WA, if you’re not already familiar with how shockingly effective their turn away from punishment and towards nurturance has been.)
Hi Bob,
Thank you for your in-depth sharing of Gordon Neufeld’s work. I’m not personally familiar with it though I have been in conversation with many who are.
The comments about trauma and response to trauma very much resonate for me. Jane, the creator of Social Harmony has a story about working at ReTribe, a summer camp program for teens. I don’t know exactly the whole story, but something about one of the Youth having a weapon and it being reveled that he had been bullied and that it had become his form of security and protection. Giving that up was incredibly traumatizing… As I remember the story, the counselors in the camp were able to support him to release the trauma he was carrying from being bullied, including his body literally shaking which is often part of the process of releasing trauma.
I also think I understand the sort of Alfa concept, or at least the need of children for their parents to be parents and in the “Dominate” position. When parents don’t hold that strong secure role it can be incredibly traumatizing for children. Children, especially young children need a stable, strong and confident parent to provide a sense of safety and security for them. We explore this in some of our parenting workshops with Social Harmony and how it can actually be destabilizing and overwhelming for children of certain ages to be presented with a vast array of choices and options or even just to grow up in a chaotic household without much structure or rhythm.
I was also thinking about the story of Lincoln High School which I just read a few weeks ago. I was totally inspired by it. Here’s the link in case others want to check it out: http://acestoohigh.com/2012/04/23/lincoln-high-school-in-walla-walla-wa-tries-new-approach-to-school-discipline-expulsions-drop-85/
In short the school recognized that many of the kids have high levels of trauma and that punitive measures just triggered more trauma. Instead they started really caring about the students and what was going on in their lives and giving them someone to talk to. The school completely turned around in so many ways. Well worth the read in my opinion.
Based on my experience being bullied in High School, I just can’t help but feel that the person bullying knows, most of the time, that he/she is doing something wrong. And they do it anyway, because they can. I’m totally in favor of treating the bully with a social harmony style of treatment. But I can’t see not administering a punitive approach and punishment as well when a person does something that they clearly know shouldn’t be done. Especially when it involves hurting others. If people break the rules and hurt others than they should be punished. This is a simple social contract. To not punish the bully would be like blaming the victim.
Mario,
I imagine your experience of being bullied was pretty painful. That it’s hard to believe that the people who bullied you also have a story other than being a bully and causing you harm because they can. I do not mean to be “soft” on bullies, I just don’t believe that punishment is actually effective and I don’t believe in this “social contract”.
This is the paradigm shift that I’m talking about- That punishment is justice and serves the good of the victim, that people who hurt people deserve to be hurt. A tit for tat…. Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing is wrong? Or as Gandhi has often been quoted as saying “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind”. This is the paradigm we are trying to shift, the paradigm of retributive rather than restorative justice. Because retribution does not heal, it does not prevent the perpetrator from further perpetration and it continues to contribute to a culture and cycle of violence.
Aside from any philosophical standpoints or beliefs, it also has limited effectiveness and doesn’t really work. On a social and cultural scale there are long term effects and cost of punishment to our society. Punishment does not rehabilitate people, it often makes them more criminal leaving even greater costs to our collective social fabric in the long run.
Here is an incredible example of the transformation that takes place in one prison where the prison wardons have been replaced with shrinks.
Psychotherapy Networker Magazine , Jan/Feb 2013
Sympathy for the Devil
Mendota, youth-treatment of last resort
By Katherine Ellison
The word psychopath distinguishes hard-bitten predators. Research shows a
treatment center—run by shrinks, not wardens—has reduced new violent offenses by
50 percent. What accounts for the Mendota Treatment Center’s success?
Counter intuitive as it may seem to respond to youthful cruelty with kindness, what
we do know is that a great deal of research suggests that warmth and strong
relationships can help deter crime.
“Harsh and punitive parenting simply doesn’t work, despite how many parents and
legislators still believe it does,” says Temple University psychologist Laurence
Steinberg, a leading expert on adolescent behavior. “The evidence would point away
from boot camps, tough love, and incarceration,” he adds, “and more toward what
the Mendota program is doing, even though they’re in the tiny minority.”
In a separate study, published two years later in the Journal of Research in Crime and
Delinquency, Caldwell calculated that despite the Mendota center’s substantially higher
daily costs, it saves the state money—roughly $7.18 for every dollar spent—by avoiding
the expense of imprisoning recidivists.
Here’s the link to the above article. I have not yet read the whole thing: http://www.psychotherapynetworker.org/magazine/currentissue/item/1999-sympathy-for-the-devil/1999-sympathy-for-the-devil
What a wonderful conversation! These questions are so important, not just in our schools but in our families, our businesses, and our general culture. Bob, thank you for mentioning Gordon Neufeld’s work. Once, after I did a large workshop for Social Harmony, I was contacted by a state organization of social workers to come talk about bullying. From this therapeutic perspective the question moves from “how do we stop these ‘bullies’ (I don’t like to label children who are bullying this way)” to “how do we HEAL these very traumatized children? Neufeld’s stance is important to me because my field of psychology often gives up on these children – probably because we don’t have the tools, or the field in general doesn’t yet accept the tools (I think bodypsychotherapy tools do work), that can heal as deeply as this situation requires. Once during my internship, I sat in on the intake of a young latino man, who had just come from jail for beating up his girlfriend. The young man stared at the floor during the whole interview. When he left, I asked the psychiatrist, “what can I do to help this young man to heal?” She replied, “He is a psychopath. You can’t help him. Just give him drugs and pray.” When I then met with him, I sat for awhile, trying to feel how it was for him to have his whole world – the psychiatrist, the clinic we were in, his family, potential employers – all see him as ‘bad.’ The shame was like a heavy cloud suffocating him. I felt such sadness inside him. After awhile I just said, “She didn’t see you, did she?” He finally looked up, deeply into my eyes, and he began to sob. He desperately needed to be truly seen, without judgment.
Yes, healing children/people who have lost the ability to connect to their own emotions because of needing to create a defense of disconnection in order to not fall apart, and therefore, they loose the ability to connect to other people’s emotions (mirror neurons), is a very hard task. It is hard enough to do when we can release judgment towards them, but if we, like the psychiatrist, can only see them as ‘bad bullies’ then the task does become quite impossible. Neufeld’s nonjudgmental stance is a prerequisite to finding a way to truly help these people feel safe enough to let down their guard, feel their pain, find self acceptance, and then finally move from the hardened stance to one of openhearted empathy for others.
At ReTribe, which Elana mentioned above, http://www.ReTribe.org we do Rites of Passages for teens, using a very deep modality called Breathwork, which is much stronger at healing than talk therapy. To give you a sense – I did Breathwork with a teen recently, who was the bully of his school. His experience, which was a vision, was of an egg, who lost his shell. (great symbolism!) At first when I asked him how he felt towards the egg, he said “He’s a dick.” But by the end of the Breathwork, he was sitting on the couch putting his arm around the egg. He subsequently decided to find a new friend group at school because he didn’t like how his friends were so mean to people.
Punishing him would have hardened him more. Healing him saves many many others from the pain of his actions.
I came across this just now and felt that it spoke so well and deeply to this conversation:
“The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral,
begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy.
Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it.
Through violence you may murder the liar,
but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth.
Through violence you may murder the hater,
but you do not murder hate.
In fact, violence merely increases hate.
So it goes.
Returning violence for violence multiplies violence,
adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.
Darkness cannot drive out darkness:
only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.