Playground Bully
Our minds are like school playgrounds that are surrounded by secure high
fences – they keep children in, and others out. Any bullies in that playground mean that
the other children canʼt escape for long. This particular bully uses verbal abuse,
shouting, teasing, and threats (rather than physical violence). The children are all
fenced in together, and ideally, they have just got to learn to accept and learn to be with
each other. So neither can we escape our thoughts, we cannot stop them, but perhaps
we can learn to live with them by seeing them differently. Along comes bully, and takes
on 3 potential ʻvictimsʼ who all react differently.
Victim 1 – believes the bully, distressed, reacts automatically (bully carries on)
Victim 2 – challenges the bully “hey Iʼm not stupid, I got 8 out of 10 in my spelling test
this morning, you only got 4” (bully eventually gives up)
Victim 3 – looks at the bully (acknowledges the thought), then walks away and goes off
to play football with his mates (dismisses the thought), then changes their focus of
attention.