In 1988, when I was fifteen, a classmate had her personal diary stolen out of her school bag, photocopied and taped up on the walls of the senior girls’ toilets. A new student was the target of a whisper campaign – instigated by her former best friend. She felt so ostracised that she was rumoured to have attempted suicide and eventually left the school. Yet another girl regularly started lunch each day by pulling her school bag out of the bin.
Fastforward to this week and the nation watched in horror, footage of a brutal school yard brawl between two teenage girls in Melbourne. It was a sickening attack complete with an enthusiastic, camera-weilding audience. The catalyst? A Facebook bullying campaign that got out of control.
Despite the current hype, female bullying is nothing new. It’s just the devastating impact that experts had – until now – under-estimated.
Behaviour that was once dismissed as girls ‘just being bitchy’ is today acknowledged as ‘relational bullying’. It’s a tag for those age-old, indirect (and often vicious) forms of aggression favoured by girls: backstabbing, exclusion, rumour spreading and the manipulation of friendships. Today it’s recognised as the most pervasive form of bullying amongst girls and boys – perhaps because it so easily goes unnoticed by teachers or parents.
Relational bullying is distinct from physical and verbal bullying because often it’s a silent campaign aimed at inflicting psychological pain on the target and breaking up their relationships with others. It can be as subtle as a withering glance, as painful as lunchtime exclusion and as insidious as an email hate campaign designed to ruin the victim’s reputation.
Top Comments
The girl who I used to be best friends with in primary school proceeded to make my life painful in high school as we were within the same friendship group.. She was jealous, manipulative and absolutely awful to me.. The other girls were no better because they were all sheep and went along with this behaviour.. I would never attend a high school reunion because of these girls and the others in my year.. I have declined all facebook requests from these girls and in all honesty, if they were on fire and I had water, I'd drink it.. Girls are awful and I don't look on my high school years fondly..
I used to get my head flushed in the school toilets. Has anyone else experienced this kind of bullying?