Rosie Waterland wrote this post in response to another scandal at a high-profile private school. Today, in the light of what’s happening at Sydney’s Ravenswood School For Girls, it seems more relevant than ever.
I thought that private school was going to change my life. It did. Within a month of leaving that place, I was so broken I tried to kill myself.
“Studies have shown that students from private schools are more likely to get into Uni and end up making a lot more money; while wife-beaters and rapists are nearly all public-school educated. Sorry, no offence, but it’s true.”
That gloriously offensive quote can be attributed to the brilliant Chris Lilley creation that is Ja’mie King – the snooty private school girl who slums it for one term at a public school in 2007’s Summer Heights High. The humour, of course, comes from the outrageously hyperbolic nature of the quote. I mean, private school students often have a reputation for being a bit snobbish, but nobody actually thinks and talks like Ja’mie, right?
Cut to…
“The amount of retarded people on this page make me so happy that my parents bothered to send me to a good, private school instead of a poverty-stricken sh***** in Pakenham. People often say that paying to send your kids to a private school is not worth it but when I read what you povo fucks post on this page I’m eternally grateful to my parents.”
That quote can be attributed to a real-life private school boy, who attends the elite Xavier College in Melbourne. He was referring to the public school students supporting each other on a Facebook VCE (Year 12 exams) forum.
Ladies and Gentleman, Ja’mie King exists, and she is the niggling sense of entitlement and superiority hidden in the dark corners of the brains of many elite private school students.
I was not shocked at all to read the comments left by that Xavier College student, just like I’ve always known that while Ja’mie King’s quotes may be outrageous, the attitude behind them is something very, very real. I know, because I’ve experienced it.
Top Comments
She's speaking about a Barker College, the only school I know of with a three level library. However, she must have gone there well after me, as girls were only allowed in years 11 and 12 when I was there.
For 6 years I was bullied, picked on and reviled at Barker College. It was one of the worst times of my life. Every day for 6 years my appearance, behaviour and anything I did or said was commented on, criticised or denigrated. This is not an exaggeration. When I left Barker my self-confidence was at the lowest its been at ever in my life. I felt unworthy of even the smallest kindness.
It has taken me years to deal with the level of bullying I experienced there. It happened because I was (and still am) socially awkward. I was surrounded by rich kids who found studying and learning relatively easy. I have ADHD and found concentration very difficult, and I did not excel in any classes. My teachers were, almost to a fault, kind and considerate and most likely the only reason why, when I started having suicidal thoughts in year 10, survived this dreadful situation.
Because I was criticised or mocked no matter what I did or said, I eventually learned to keep very quiet. With the sole exception of one dear friend - the only person in the school who ever treated me with real friendship - I was excluded from all social activities and events. This continued even to my senior years - I believe I was the only student not invited to the scavenger hunt, or any event for that matter. Even to the last day I was denigrated - I have my old signing book and I have proof of some of the nasty comments written about me.
I left that godforsaken school a total mess emotionally. There are only two people who I have kept in contact with and I'll probably keep it that way.
To bury some of my past demons I joined the Barker College class of 1996 Facebook group. They have their reunion tonight, and I won't be going. They have been consistently posting pictures and stories of the good old days and best days of their lives, which is great if you were a person who wasn't deliberately socially isolated, disparaged, bad at sport or struggled in classes. In short, if you were normal in Barker when you graduated in 1996 you were fortunate to be alive and in the upper stratum of Australian society, both economically and socially. I don't begrudge anyone this. But for me, *my* time at school was a daily living hell with no alternative but to somehow get through every day, one day at a time.
I recently posted that I can't make it because of the horrid time I'd had. Instead of reaching out to me, they removed me from the group. It's for the best - as Groucho Marx once said: I don't want to be part of any group that would accept me. But if you want an example of how Barker people isolated those who struggled every day and, despite trying very hard to fit in, were different in some way, then look no further than my removal from this group.
Enjoy your night all those who attend. I hope you have a great night reminiscing on the great times you all had, but don't forget there are those of us you systematically excluded, bullied and generally discriminated against. Whilst most people grow from their school experiences, I somehow doubt that many of you from the Barker College class of 1996 have learned much, if anything, about the lasting hurt that discrimination, abusive language and isolation can have on another.
I went to an elite boys' school, and it still affects me badly to this day (I am now 35). I got a top university entrance score, studied law, latin, english lit at university, became a lawyer etc etc. I was miserable for all of it. I tried hard to shed the classist attitudes drilled into me during my teenage years, but unfortunately I still find it hard to relate to most Australians. I do not even speak like them. If nothing else it really limits your dating pool when you feel no one understands you or your struggles. I felt much happier in England. I had a few years of therapy (Lacanian psychoanalysis) which helped.