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You are here: Home / Archives for bullying

Saturday Morning Musings

November 9, 2013 at 8:44 am by Claudia

that'showthelightgetsinfordon

There was an earlier post on this blog where I used this photo. I also referenced these same lyrics by Leonard Cohen, but I placed the text below the photo. Then I decided to do this version for my husband.

Since I just started How the Light Gets In by Louise Penny last night, those words are on my mind again. (They also live on the chalkboard in the studio.) In her introduction, Penny, who often quotes poetry in her books, tells us about approaching Cohen to ask permission to use those lyrics. Fully expecting to pay a sizable fee for them, as is almost always the case with copyrighted text, she was amazed when Cohen told her she could use them for free. What makes that gesture even more amazing is the fact that he’d recently had all of his savings stolen by someone he had trusted. Such a generous spirit!

How the Light Gets In was released this year and that means, my friends, that I’m at the end of the series. At least, the end so far. Hurry, hurry Louise Penny! Write another Inspector Gamache Novel! And they are literary novels, in addition to being mysteries. She is simply a superb writer.

hotchocolate2

Hot chocolate.

Need I say more? Yesterday, after a brisk walk late in the day, some hot chocolate seemed to be in order. I’m limiting my intake, though. I only allow this treat every 3 days or so as it has a sneaky way of adding on the pounds.

A mini rant: I don’t know if you’ve been following the situation with the Miami Dolphins. I’m not a football fan, but this has been all over the news. A player abruptly left the team after having been subjected to bullying by a fellow team member. The more I read about the atmosphere in the locker room and about the player accused of the bullying, the more disgusted I get. These are adults who should know better. And what really steams me are all the interviews with fellow players who blame the guy being bullied for not ‘standing up for himself’ instead of the guy who did the bullying.

What the? Why do these guys blame the victim instead of the perpetrator? I don’t care whether we’re talking about a small child or a big, burly football player  – the victim is blameless.

Then, last night, I saw an excerpt from an interview with Tucker Carlson where he actually said that bullying is a ‘fad’ and implied we’re making too big a deal of it. Really? What planet is this guy living on? Tell that to the parents of a child who committed suicide because of bullying. Tell that to the victims who find their lives forever changed because they were bullied.

This sort of  ‘suck it up and stand up for yourself’ mentality is simplistic and dangerous. It implies that victims of a crime choose to be victims. It’s just a step away from the ‘she asked for it’ response to a charge of rape.

No. Those who bully are the wrong-doers. They have to be brought to account. There is no excuse for it; whether online, in a school or on a professional football team.

Happy Saturday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Tagged With: Louise Penny, tucker carlsonFiled Under: books, bullying, life 37 Comments

Around the Cottage

November 30, 2011 at 9:49 am by Claudia

Well, the big news here at Mockingbird Hill Cottage is….hang on to your hats…the septic tank was emptied yesterday!

I know. Take a moment to collect yourself. If I had been a bit more on top of things, I would have taken pictures. I could have devoted a whole post to the process.

Let me tell you, the guy who drives that truck and empties the tank deserves to be paid very well.

I keep forgetting to share this little gem with you. I discovered it in a local shop and was planning to sell it in my future Etsy shop. But Don claimed it. It’s about 2 inches high and says:

I’ll hold your rings
For you;
While dishes or
Washing you do.

Souvenir of Lake George, NY

Lake George is quite a bit north of us, in the Adirondacks.

The little lid comes off and there is a little well with a piece of wood in the center, just like a ring holder. I used this on Thanksgiving when I took my wedding ring off in order to make biscuits. It lives on the window ledge by the sink. I love these little wooden souvenirs. They look handmade and are so gosh darned charming.
Can you find Scout in the background of the photo?
By the way, I’ve actually signed up for my Etsy shop! Someone already had the name Mockingbird Hill – I couldn’t add ‘Cottage’ because there were too many characters. So it will be under my user name of ScoutHarper. I have no idea when it will open, but I’m aiming for the first of the year. I will carry vintage finds and some handmade things, as well. I’m getting excited.

Playing with the Necco Candy Jar:

Filled with the fabric Easter eggs I made a couple of years ago. The pastel colors remind me of yummy candy.

I’ll eventually fill it with something Christmas-y but I refuse to start Christmas decorating this early. I’m adamant about the subject. Hey, I love Christmas decorations as much as anyone else, but for me, the season loses its sense of wonder if I rush into decorating the minute Thanksgiving has ended. We always get a real tree – usually around December 10th or so. Then the decorating will begin.

They’re in the jar temporarily. In fact, I’ve already removed them. The inside of the jar still smells musty. I’ve used coffee grounds in the past to remove mustiness. I have some ready to go. Any other suggestions?

I must thank you for the wonderful and moving comments on the “Blogging Etiquette: Mean Girls” post. Wow. I read them all more than once. I was touched and in some cases, moved to tears. This clearly resonates with all of us. Whether we’ve witnessed someone being bullied or suffered through the bullying of one of our children or have been bullied ourselves – this kind of behavior leaves lasting scars. I feel passionately about the subject and it’s clear that you do, too. Thank you.

Filed Under: bullying, collecting, etsy, vintage 15 Comments

Blogging Etiquette: Mean Girls

November 28, 2011 at 1:30 am by Claudia

This is a bit of a rant, so bear with me.

The other day a friend sent me a link to a couple of blog posts that I found deeply troubling. The blogs and bloggers shall remain nameless. Since I’m talking about blogging etiquette here, linking to them or naming names would be bad manners on my part.

One blogger wrote disparagingly about a woman who was sitting nearby in a public space. A certain aspect of her appearance apparently didn’t meet with the blogger’s approval. Not only did she write about this woman in a negative way based on something purely superficial, her readers joined in. The comment section was full of mean-spirited comments and the written equivalent of laughter about the other woman and the way she looked – a woman, by the way, that none of the commenters had actually seen. Only one commenter had the guts to call them on this bitchy, hurtful behavior. We used to call it ‘picking on’ someone. It’s also called bullying. Whatever you call it, it’s despicable. They were picking on someone who didn’t even know she was being written about – who didn’t have the chance to respond or fight back.

The other blogger published a photo of herself with a very heavy set person (facing away from the camera) prominently in the background. She invited her readers to give the post a caption. For the moment, I’ll give her the benefit of the doubt and assume her intention was for the title to be about the part of the photo she herself was in. Anyway, her readers did supply titles. Not very nice ones. Most of them – not all – were pertaining to the innocent person in the background of the photo who didn’t even know her picture was being taken. As to my ‘benefit of the doubt’ – the blogger didn’t elect to delete the comments. Or even address them. And I assume she cropped, or didn’t crop, the photo. It’s getting harder and harder to make that ‘benefit of the doubt’ stick, isn’t it? Making fun of someone who can’t fight back is all too easy. It takes no skill, no wit, and certainly no strength of character.

Both bloggers are younger, probably in their early thirties, and are “mommy bloggers.” A different generation than me. Both have children. I can’t help but wonder how they would address this kind of behavior if it was directed against their children? Would they say it’s wrong? Would they be spitting mad if anyone bullied or picked on their children? They would have every right to be. Or, on the other hand, will their children emulate their mothers? After all, parents are role models, aren’t they? What kind of example is being set here?

Do they not realize that what they are doing is wrong? That tearing someone else down to build yourself up is the worst kind of behavior? That there is no excuse for it whatsoever? And all this is being done publicly, on the internet, where anyone can see it, including the innocent victims.

I’ve said this before on this blog: the blogging world is just like the real world. It reminds me of both the good and bad parts of high school. There are kind, funny, talented, generous, compassionate and genuinely good bloggers out there. There are cliques. There is a sort of ‘in crowd.’ There are popularity contests. And apparently there are mean girls (and mean boys, I suppose) who trash those who are ‘different,’ who march to the beat of a different drum, who dare to look and dress in a style that doesn’t meet with their approval, or whose body weight doesn’t conform to their standards.

It’s so disappointing. And, to be honest, it makes me very angry. Even as a kid, I didn’t tolerate that kind of behavior. Thanks to my parents, I knew it was wrong. You would think that as adults, we would be able to leave the need for that kind of petty, pathetic aggression behind. I guess we can use our blogs in any way we choose, but to use a blog as a vehicle to make fun of someone you don’t even know and have never really talked to, simply because you’re bored and want to trash some innocent bystander – well, to my mind, that is beneath contempt. And sadly, it brings out a sort of mob mentality in those who comment.

I expect more from women. We should raise each other up. We should show compassion. We should cheer each other on. And we should show, by our behavior, by the words we choose to write, that bullying of any kind is unacceptable.

I realize I’m preaching to the choir here. Thankfully, my readers and the bloggers I visit are simply not like that.

We all say and do things we regret. But the beauty of writing a blog is that we have the chance to think and edit before we hit ‘publish.’

I love blogging. I guess my love for this medium makes the misuse of it even more shocking to me. And the sad fact that no one stood up for these unknown women, save one person, is very troubling. Maybe I’m naive to expect more of grown women. But I do. They should be deeply ashamed.

Filed Under: blogging, bullying 66 Comments

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I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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