Anti-bullying signal-boost.
Oct. 9th, 2010 02:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
People have been talking about bullying lately. Dan Savage's It Gets Better Project has drawn attention to the suicides of gay teenagers, and has inspired the Make It Better Project, to give youth and concerned adults the tools they need to stop bullying in the schools. (I strongly recommend MIBP's Take Action page, which has such useful links as information about The Safe Schools Improvement Act (H.R. 2262/S. 3739) and how you can support it). And both
homasse and
seishonagon linked to an insightful and useful article by Kate Harding, On Good Kids and Total Assholes.
I'm glad people are talking about this so much-- it's making me think about my own childhood, and how much I accepted kids making fun of me, ostracizing me, and generally making me miserable as "just the way things are." That understanding of the universe and my place in it had long-lasting effects, and I am delighted and grateful that people now are talking seriously about how to stop bullying.
(I may at some point make a larger post, but at the moment, I wanted to signal-boost. Yay, signal-boosting.)
--R
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I'm glad people are talking about this so much-- it's making me think about my own childhood, and how much I accepted kids making fun of me, ostracizing me, and generally making me miserable as "just the way things are." That understanding of the universe and my place in it had long-lasting effects, and I am delighted and grateful that people now are talking seriously about how to stop bullying.
(I may at some point make a larger post, but at the moment, I wanted to signal-boost. Yay, signal-boosting.)
--R
(no subject)
Date: 2010-10-12 02:26 am (UTC)I'm sorry for misunderstanding, and the rest of your comment makes a lot of sense. I certainly don't think you would advocate disregard of patients' feelings! But I do think there is a problem with the way doctors tend to disregard patients' feelings, and wanted to know how much you thought about that general problem. It is also true that the way in which other people's weight affects my life is primarily a problem of others' psychological state; whereas it affects yours primarily in terms of medical problems.
I think we are reacting to different aspects here, as you said to
My perception of the fat acceptance movement, on the other hand, is that I've seen it do the things you said are "awesome/fantastic" and figured there were only a few nutcases who did the "not cool" bit. Apparently your experience is not at all concordant with mine, and that explains the different priorities.