As an educator I feel that this is certainly a case of harrassment...which is a form of bullying.
I believe you have taken some very pro-active steps in trying to rectify this problem.
I think Kelly perhaps could make her desires known a little stronger to this shadow child and if she has a hissy fit for Kelly telling on her.. so be it. Kelly will only grow and strengthen from the experience and the child will get the message.
Is there a possibility of putting Kelly into another grade 5 class?
I would also put what you know and all the details into writing. Then, make a phone call to the principal's superior. The superintendant perhaps. Ask to have a meeting with this individual with all your documentation in tow. Send a copy of your documentation to the principal as well. The superintendant is usually an employee of the Board of Education who deals with complaints regarding either teachers and serious natured problems within the schools.
You have taken the right channels ... you addressed the teacher, then the principal, now you might need to go higher. It is done all the time.
Do you realize you are considering homeschooling your child because another CHILD is harassing her???? I love ya Shell, but that is insane.
Kelly is sweet and wonderful and we all hope she remains that way. But it will only get harder for her to learn to stand up for herself as she gets older. Healthy boundaries are crucial to a health adulthood.
Ever had a stalker? Kindness does not get them to go away. Even kindly asking them to go away does not get them to go away. For that matter, being a B*tch doesn't get them to go away either. The ONLY way to get them to go away is to literally ignore them - pretend they aren't there, don't exist.
Sounds harsh, yes? It is. But this child is, in a very real sense, stalking Kelly. Hold her, hug her, wipe away the tears she sheds when she feels guilty for being cruel. But tell her she has an OBLIGATION to herself to draw boundaries and maintain HEALTHY friendships. She has an obligation to herself to pretend this girl does not exist when this girl is crossing into her boundaries.
It is going to be very hard for her and for you. But better she learn this lesson now, while the price is cheap, than as a teen or young adult when it is a hormone crazed boy following her everywhere.
If I'm understanding you, Abi, you are suggesting I do what I've tried to do with Kelly already. And I'm gonna continue to do so, empowering her, making her do it.
MAKE her stand up for herself.
I know she has to, she must and it's the only way she's gonna make it in this phuked up world.
What I wanna do as her mama is bring her home, protect her and never let her outa my sight. I am fully aware that she has GOT to get this in order to function in society.
She never lacks for examples of women that stand up for themselves, fight hard til the end and take no shi+.
This other child is obviously "obsessed" with Kelly and getting her way in this situation.
The only way out of this one is probably time and Kelly not giving any emotion or attention to the other young girl at all. Stalkers feed on any attention they can get.
Shell, private topic me if you want some special assistance.
I wish for you and Kelly both to get through this quickly and as painlessly as possible.
I had a similar situation with my daughter and this very dysfunctional friend of hers. My daughter felt guilty setting boundaries or hurting the other one.
Our children are just that---children. We can teach them the right behavior, but that doesn't mean putting themselves in harms way for what seems to be "the greater good".
The devil will use that against good people EVERYTIME! I mean, why do WE feel guilty and the perpetrator does not??? You cannot help someone who doesn't want it or cannot recognize they need help.
I moved my daughter----out of the area to live with her dad. It was the quickest way to break that suffocating chain. And what happened to that other girl? She just moved on to her next victim. Her parents were of no help, the school didn't help.
These are sick kids whom I believe have real problems of spiritual darkness. When conditions go beyond logic-------
I don't know you, you don't know me but I have daughters too.
Your daughter is at the age where she is learning to swim by herself so to speak. Sometimes they will flounder when they get into new 'waters.'
Your daughter is in new waters with this girl. Her training up to now has not covered how to deal with this type of person. But for your daughter to learn to survive now, especially in middle school when they all turn into emotional tornadoes and later in life, she will, as with everyone else in the world, learning new coping skills.
To be a well rounded person, that person is going to have to learn tell others to bug off and mean it. This is the age when my daughter had to learn to say, "f u."
It went against all I taught her; to be nice, turn the other cheek, be loving, love those who aren't accepted. Then like the diaper commerical, we had to get real.
Reality is your daughter is first responsible to lover herself and respect herself first and foremost. Only then can she be a good friend to others. Otherwise, she is a doormat. Sorry, but my family and my children had to learn the hard way too. Our children need to learn to push back when they are maltreated. It's not a pretty side to life, but one can not be good all the time to everyone. It's not possible.
So our children have to learn to be good to themselves even if that makes them feel selfish.
Your daughter, like everyone else who has had to learn this type of lesson, will have to do this by herself, you can't do it for her. You can advise her when she gets home, but you cannot do this for her. To go to school and try to separate her and that other child, no matter how annoying they are, is not helping your daughter learn the necessary coping skills she needs to deal with situations that are unpleasant. Once your child, or anyone else for that matter, gets tired of a situation and sees that no one will bail them out, they will figure out how to deal with it.
This other child cannot be removed from the school and you cannot put a restraining order on her. Don't even consider that. The child may have unhealthy attachments but she has done nothing illegal, has not threatened the life of your child.
The school cannot do more than to make sure that the girls are not in the same classroom together. They cannot make sure that they are separated during lunch or recess as that places them in a position where they can be sued by the other girl's parents. Remember, the shadow girl has done nothing deemed wrong or that puts other students in danger. The school has a line to walk as well and if the only complaint you have is that she tries to dominate your daughter's social life, I am sorry, but every judge or lawyer you would go to should you chose to take legal action would look at you like you grew another head.
This is one of those times you need to let go and let your child figure out life. Removing her from school only prolongs the problem and doesn't solve anything. There are icky people no matter where she will go and they are always people who will try to dominate and bully. The best solution is to learn how to stand up to them. Yes, that is hard. Yes, that will cause pain. Most growth experiences do revolve around pain. "Growing pains." No, you didn't bring your daughter into the world to suffer; but that is unavoidable, life is full of pain.
Having stomach aches along with other signs of anxiety is not uncommon. Perhaps the best thing you can do now for her is to seek out some type of counseling outside of the school to help her deal with it.
Being nice and loving is great but it is unbalanced if a person never learns to put down their foot every once in awhile. We have to love ourselves too and first before we can help others.
Being a daddy of boys I have little to contribute. It is a form of bullying, but boys tend to take a more direct and physical approach...at least mine would.
Sometimes, you must just get away from a situiation you aren't equipped to deal with head on, although stuff like that comes up all our lives.
The first thing that came to my mind was for Kelly to talk about it in depth with Sami. I have an idea Sami might have some creative solutions no one has thought of yet...and that's what sisters are for.
Samantha told Kelly to ignore the girl. If she approaches her, act as if there is not another human being there and no voice heard.
Samantha told Kelly if she yells at her, just continue to carry on with whatever she is doing and it's the other girl who will look silly.
Samantha told Kelly to remember that she's very much loved and she can do anything she wants to do and she needs to 'get some balls' in order to do most of them.
Use reverse psychology. Actually encourage them to be together to the point of nausea. Even include the other girls' moms in it. Then they may see how your "obsessive" behavior is theirs as well.
Whether that works or not, this situation seems like it is going to have to run its course. It's probably a better problem to have than drugs.
"If I'm understanding you, Abi, you are suggesting I do what I've tried to do with Kelly already. And I'm gonna continue to do so, empowering her, making her do it.
MAKE her stand up for herself"
Yes! and No. I'm suggesting what Sami suggested. Often with adults who behave like this child is - and often with children in general, negative attention is better than no attention. So, ignore, ignore, ignore, pretend she doesn't exist.
"My child is taught in our home that she is to be kind, generous, she's to share, she's to not exclude others in a way that embarasses them, she's to love the unlovable, all those pretty and wonderful things. She wasn't buying it."
These are wonderful ideals, traits, characteristics that we would love for all of our children to possess. BUT in the real world (and that is what we have to prepare our children for) sometimes it is healthier and safer to turn our backs on the unlovable (because sometimes there is a darned good reason why they are unloveable). Sometimes it is healthier and safer to be downright rude to the unloveable. I wish I had learned these lessons as child, it would have saved me a LOT of grief as an adult.
"Kelly didn't want to hurt her feelings."
Sometimes, and I prefer only as a last resort, you have to hurt someone else's feelings in order to take care of yourself.
It is damned hard being a parent these days, eh, Shell? But you are on the right track. Hold your ground and let Kelly know you expert her to hold her ground as well.
Back out and off and require Kelly solve the problem herself. You have given direction...done all you can. Turning it over to Kelly means, for a while, Kelly will be bullied (shadowed). However, she hasn't taken your advice, or her older wiser sister's. Let her take her lumps.
Sooner or later, if you totally stay out...she will have to tell the shadow to bug off and make it stick.
Kelly, I'm so sorry I have to leave you alone on this shadow thing. I can't do any more, I can't fix this problem, or help you fix it. I tried, but you want me to do the impossible and control a child that's not mine to control. I can't do that.
Turn your own emotions off, and let Kelly deal with this now. Sooner or later, the words "bug off get out of my life" will emerge when she's frustrated enough, and all adults in the matter know what's going on and will take it from there.
That is very close to one of the Love and Logic principles we've begun to apply here at home.
Identify who the problem belongs to (If you worry about your child's problem your child won't, because they know they don't have to).
Let them know you believe they are capable of solving the problem by empathizing and then asking them, what are YOU going to do about it.
If the child doesn't have any ideas, offer a few, starting with the most ludicrous ones. Then, ask them how each possible solution might work out.
Tell the child, good luck with that. Let me know how it turns out. Then let them choose which solution, if any to apply.
Sounds very simple. And it is, in a sense. But, it is also very very hard to let go and let your child endure the consequences of their choice. However, one of the things I've learned is, it is better to let them suffer the little consequences while they are younger than to have them suffer the more expensive ones when they are older.
My daughters were in the 10--11yr range when they began to be more selective of their friends. Before that they would play with anyone, even kids that put them down or later 'betrayed' them.(My kids' word, not mine.)There are plenty of mean girls out there, their job is to learn to identify them and say buhbye.
It helped alot to learn this in 4th and 5th grade, even though it was hard and there were lots of tears and 'I hate school' mornings.
Finally they began using caller ID to screen their phone calls and if a particular neighbor girl came over they met her at the door and said they were busy and couldn't play, shut door.
I thought we would go through the same trauma when they started middleschool a year or so later, but guess what? They made friends who were nice kids who treat them well--boys and girls-- without any hitches.
Now we're starting to enter the romantic phase--hopefully those skills will carry over.
I think teaching Kelly to honestly convey her feeling to the stalker. Things like "I don't want to be around you" and "Get away from me" sound harsh (especially to a child taught to be so nice), but the truth may help the stalker will "get" it. Maybe not, but it could make her go away. It may make Kelly a target for name calling, but only for awhile.
I agree that if it doesn't get resolved, I would contact the Police. That may shake up the girl and her family if they get a visit from Mr. Policeman. I especially would do this since you've gone through every avenue to resolve the situation.
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A la prochaine
Shellers,
As an educator I feel that this is certainly a case of harrassment...which is a form of bullying.
I believe you have taken some very pro-active steps in trying to rectify this problem.
I think Kelly perhaps could make her desires known a little stronger to this shadow child and if she has a hissy fit for Kelly telling on her.. so be it. Kelly will only grow and strengthen from the experience and the child will get the message.
Is there a possibility of putting Kelly into another grade 5 class?
I would also put what you know and all the details into writing. Then, make a phone call to the principal's superior. The superintendant perhaps. Ask to have a meeting with this individual with all your documentation in tow. Send a copy of your documentation to the principal as well. The superintendant is usually an employee of the Board of Education who deals with complaints regarding either teachers and serious natured problems within the schools.
You have taken the right channels ... you addressed the teacher, then the principal, now you might need to go higher. It is done all the time.
Remember, you are your child's only advocate.
Keep up the great work!
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Abigail
Shell,
Do you realize you are considering homeschooling your child because another CHILD is harassing her???? I love ya Shell, but that is insane.
Kelly is sweet and wonderful and we all hope she remains that way. But it will only get harder for her to learn to stand up for herself as she gets older. Healthy boundaries are crucial to a health adulthood.
Ever had a stalker? Kindness does not get them to go away. Even kindly asking them to go away does not get them to go away. For that matter, being a B*tch doesn't get them to go away either. The ONLY way to get them to go away is to literally ignore them - pretend they aren't there, don't exist.
Sounds harsh, yes? It is. But this child is, in a very real sense, stalking Kelly. Hold her, hug her, wipe away the tears she sheds when she feels guilty for being cruel. But tell her she has an OBLIGATION to herself to draw boundaries and maintain HEALTHY friendships. She has an obligation to herself to pretend this girl does not exist when this girl is crossing into her boundaries.
It is going to be very hard for her and for you. But better she learn this lesson now, while the price is cheap, than as a teen or young adult when it is a hormone crazed boy following her everywhere.
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Shellon
If I'm understanding you, Abi, you are suggesting I do what I've tried to do with Kelly already. And I'm gonna continue to do so, empowering her, making her do it.
MAKE her stand up for herself.
I know she has to, she must and it's the only way she's gonna make it in this phuked up world.
What I wanna do as her mama is bring her home, protect her and never let her outa my sight. I am fully aware that she has GOT to get this in order to function in society.
She never lacks for examples of women that stand up for themselves, fight hard til the end and take no shi+.
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coolchef1248 @adelphia.net
shell
this may sound a little harsh
but you have documantation with all of the mettings with the school etc..........
i would go to the police and have a restraining order put on the shadow
good luck my prayers are with you
your little one sounds wonderful
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Shellon
Once again I'm not communicating myself properly.
Thanks for prayers.
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reikilady
This other child is obviously "obsessed" with Kelly and getting her way in this situation.
The only way out of this one is probably time and Kelly not giving any emotion or attention to the other young girl at all. Stalkers feed on any attention they can get.
Shell, private topic me if you want some special assistance.
I wish for you and Kelly both to get through this quickly and as painlessly as possible.
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Dilva
I had a similar situation with my daughter and this very dysfunctional friend of hers. My daughter felt guilty setting boundaries or hurting the other one.
Our children are just that---children. We can teach them the right behavior, but that doesn't mean putting themselves in harms way for what seems to be "the greater good".
The devil will use that against good people EVERYTIME! I mean, why do WE feel guilty and the perpetrator does not??? You cannot help someone who doesn't want it or cannot recognize they need help.
I moved my daughter----out of the area to live with her dad. It was the quickest way to break that suffocating chain. And what happened to that other girl? She just moved on to her next victim. Her parents were of no help, the school didn't help.
These are sick kids whom I believe have real problems of spiritual darkness. When conditions go beyond logic-------
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Samurai
Hello. Second thread I am posting on.
I don't know you, you don't know me but I have daughters too.
Your daughter is at the age where she is learning to swim by herself so to speak. Sometimes they will flounder when they get into new 'waters.'
Your daughter is in new waters with this girl. Her training up to now has not covered how to deal with this type of person. But for your daughter to learn to survive now, especially in middle school when they all turn into emotional tornadoes and later in life, she will, as with everyone else in the world, learning new coping skills.
To be a well rounded person, that person is going to have to learn tell others to bug off and mean it. This is the age when my daughter had to learn to say, "f u."
It went against all I taught her; to be nice, turn the other cheek, be loving, love those who aren't accepted. Then like the diaper commerical, we had to get real.
Reality is your daughter is first responsible to lover herself and respect herself first and foremost. Only then can she be a good friend to others. Otherwise, she is a doormat. Sorry, but my family and my children had to learn the hard way too. Our children need to learn to push back when they are maltreated. It's not a pretty side to life, but one can not be good all the time to everyone. It's not possible.
So our children have to learn to be good to themselves even if that makes them feel selfish.
Your daughter, like everyone else who has had to learn this type of lesson, will have to do this by herself, you can't do it for her. You can advise her when she gets home, but you cannot do this for her. To go to school and try to separate her and that other child, no matter how annoying they are, is not helping your daughter learn the necessary coping skills she needs to deal with situations that are unpleasant. Once your child, or anyone else for that matter, gets tired of a situation and sees that no one will bail them out, they will figure out how to deal with it.
This other child cannot be removed from the school and you cannot put a restraining order on her. Don't even consider that. The child may have unhealthy attachments but she has done nothing illegal, has not threatened the life of your child.
The school cannot do more than to make sure that the girls are not in the same classroom together. They cannot make sure that they are separated during lunch or recess as that places them in a position where they can be sued by the other girl's parents. Remember, the shadow girl has done nothing deemed wrong or that puts other students in danger. The school has a line to walk as well and if the only complaint you have is that she tries to dominate your daughter's social life, I am sorry, but every judge or lawyer you would go to should you chose to take legal action would look at you like you grew another head.
This is one of those times you need to let go and let your child figure out life. Removing her from school only prolongs the problem and doesn't solve anything. There are icky people no matter where she will go and they are always people who will try to dominate and bully. The best solution is to learn how to stand up to them. Yes, that is hard. Yes, that will cause pain. Most growth experiences do revolve around pain. "Growing pains." No, you didn't bring your daughter into the world to suffer; but that is unavoidable, life is full of pain.
Having stomach aches along with other signs of anxiety is not uncommon. Perhaps the best thing you can do now for her is to seek out some type of counseling outside of the school to help her deal with it.
Being nice and loving is great but it is unbalanced if a person never learns to put down their foot every once in awhile. We have to love ourselves too and first before we can help others.
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Ron G.
Being a daddy of boys I have little to contribute. It is a form of bullying, but boys tend to take a more direct and physical approach...at least mine would.
Sometimes, you must just get away from a situiation you aren't equipped to deal with head on, although stuff like that comes up all our lives.
The first thing that came to my mind was for Kelly to talk about it in depth with Sami. I have an idea Sami might have some creative solutions no one has thought of yet...and that's what sisters are for.
You have our prayers and thoughts.
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Shellon
Yes she did talk to her big sister.
What Samantha told her was great advise.
Samantha told Kelly to ignore the girl. If she approaches her, act as if there is not another human being there and no voice heard.
Samantha told Kelly if she yells at her, just continue to carry on with whatever she is doing and it's the other girl who will look silly.
Samantha told Kelly to remember that she's very much loved and she can do anything she wants to do and she needs to 'get some balls' in order to do most of them.
Samantha told Kelly that we support her.
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johniam
Use reverse psychology. Actually encourage them to be together to the point of nausea. Even include the other girls' moms in it. Then they may see how your "obsessive" behavior is theirs as well.
Whether that works or not, this situation seems like it is going to have to run its course. It's probably a better problem to have than drugs.
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Abigail
"If I'm understanding you, Abi, you are suggesting I do what I've tried to do with Kelly already. And I'm gonna continue to do so, empowering her, making her do it.
MAKE her stand up for herself"
Yes! and No. I'm suggesting what Sami suggested. Often with adults who behave like this child is - and often with children in general, negative attention is better than no attention. So, ignore, ignore, ignore, pretend she doesn't exist.
"My child is taught in our home that she is to be kind, generous, she's to share, she's to not exclude others in a way that embarasses them, she's to love the unlovable, all those pretty and wonderful things. She wasn't buying it."
These are wonderful ideals, traits, characteristics that we would love for all of our children to possess. BUT in the real world (and that is what we have to prepare our children for) sometimes it is healthier and safer to turn our backs on the unlovable (because sometimes there is a darned good reason why they are unloveable). Sometimes it is healthier and safer to be downright rude to the unloveable. I wish I had learned these lessons as child, it would have saved me a LOT of grief as an adult.
"Kelly didn't want to hurt her feelings."
Sometimes, and I prefer only as a last resort, you have to hurt someone else's feelings in order to take care of yourself.
It is damned hard being a parent these days, eh, Shell? But you are on the right track. Hold your ground and let Kelly know you expert her to hold her ground as well.
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krys
Another hard lesson:
You take the consequences of your choices.
Back out and off and require Kelly solve the problem herself. You have given direction...done all you can. Turning it over to Kelly means, for a while, Kelly will be bullied (shadowed). However, she hasn't taken your advice, or her older wiser sister's. Let her take her lumps.
Sooner or later, if you totally stay out...she will have to tell the shadow to bug off and make it stick.
Kelly, I'm so sorry I have to leave you alone on this shadow thing. I can't do any more, I can't fix this problem, or help you fix it. I tried, but you want me to do the impossible and control a child that's not mine to control. I can't do that.
Turn your own emotions off, and let Kelly deal with this now. Sooner or later, the words "bug off get out of my life" will emerge when she's frustrated enough, and all adults in the matter know what's going on and will take it from there.
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Abigail
Krys,
That is very close to one of the Love and Logic principles we've begun to apply here at home.
Identify who the problem belongs to (If you worry about your child's problem your child won't, because they know they don't have to).
Let them know you believe they are capable of solving the problem by empathizing and then asking them, what are YOU going to do about it.
If the child doesn't have any ideas, offer a few, starting with the most ludicrous ones. Then, ask them how each possible solution might work out.
Tell the child, good luck with that. Let me know how it turns out. Then let them choose which solution, if any to apply.
Sounds very simple. And it is, in a sense. But, it is also very very hard to let go and let your child endure the consequences of their choice. However, one of the things I've learned is, it is better to let them suffer the little consequences while they are younger than to have them suffer the more expensive ones when they are older.
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Bramble
My daughters were in the 10--11yr range when they began to be more selective of their friends. Before that they would play with anyone, even kids that put them down or later 'betrayed' them.(My kids' word, not mine.)There are plenty of mean girls out there, their job is to learn to identify them and say buhbye.
It helped alot to learn this in 4th and 5th grade, even though it was hard and there were lots of tears and 'I hate school' mornings.
Finally they began using caller ID to screen their phone calls and if a particular neighbor girl came over they met her at the door and said they were busy and couldn't play, shut door.
I thought we would go through the same trauma when they started middleschool a year or so later, but guess what? They made friends who were nice kids who treat them well--boys and girls-- without any hitches.
Now we're starting to enter the romantic phase--hopefully those skills will carry over.
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Nottawayfer
I think teaching Kelly to honestly convey her feeling to the stalker. Things like "I don't want to be around you" and "Get away from me" sound harsh (especially to a child taught to be so nice), but the truth may help the stalker will "get" it. Maybe not, but it could make her go away. It may make Kelly a target for name calling, but only for awhile.
I agree that if it doesn't get resolved, I would contact the Police. That may shake up the girl and her family if they get a visit from Mr. Policeman. I especially would do this since you've gone through every avenue to resolve the situation.
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