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Home » Adult Bullying: The Epidemic No One Talks About – Kevin Ward (Transcript)

Adult Bullying: The Epidemic No One Talks About – Kevin Ward (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Kevin Ward’s talk titled “Adult Bullying: The Epidemic No One Talks About” at TEDxSantaBarbara conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The First Day of Third Grade

It’s my first day of third grade, and I’m so excited because we’d just moved to a new town, so this is an adventure: a new school, new friends, and… my brand-new pair of glasses. I’m on the playground, and a kid walks up to me. He’s about my size, with thick, bushy, blonde hair, and he says, “Hey, want to fight?” “No!” I exclaim. “Well, I do!” he retorts.

Next thing I know, I am in a headlock, and the punches are coming and coming, and I can feel my face just being squeezed, and it feels like the hair is being ripped out of my scalp!

Now, I’m eight years old, and getting beat up is new for me. Bam! Another hit, and another. Finally, I managed to twist loose. “My glasses!” They’re broken. And he broke them. And all I can think to myself is… run, get away as fast as I can, and that’s what I did. I get home, my mom sits me in her lap, tears pour down my face, and she says, “Bub, you did the right thing to not fight back. You just turn the other cheek, and kids like that will leave you alone.”

A Cycle of Bullying

Okay, Mom’s always right, right? But in fourth grade, it was Colin, with his red hair and freckles, and he didn’t leave me alone. The next year, it was Greg, with his tough-guy strut. In junior high, it was Santos, our all-star running back, and then Robert, and then Dean… In high school, it was this little punk, Raul, who would punch me every day in the locker room, and I just took it. My friend Johnny said, “Stand up to him!” And Johnny was right, but I listened to Mom.

And it didn’t end with classmates. My senior year, my first adult bully showed up. We’d just moved to another new town, and so I’m the new kid again. And our basketball team was ranked number one in the state, and some were saying that I was the best player on the team. That’s me, number 14. But to Coach Reeves, I was an intruder on his team.

And so, when I missed one layup in a first game, he benched me permanently. He told me a few days later it was up to me if I wanted to sit on the bench for the rest of the season, or I can quit. I quit.

I graduated from college, got my first job, and got bullied. I was bullied in my marriage. Seventeen years of marriage, and not a single fight with my wife. Why? Because I just turned the other cheek. Until one day, all the problems exploded, and just like third grade, I ran away. Only now… with three little girls of my own, what’s broken… is a lot more than a pair of glasses. We think of bullying as a childhood issue. Yes, and it is. And yet, the brutal reality is that one of the greatest oppressors of our time is adult bullying.

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Understanding Adult Bullying

Now, what is adult bullying? Well, it’s this. That is not a textbook definition of bullying, and yet, I think the cartoon version sometimes is clearer. A little sand in the face, and… a little threat, just to remind you that you’re nobody. And that plays out countless times every day all over the world, in the workplace, when the boss says, “You want to keep your job? You keep your mouth shut!” Or when a co-worker rudely walks in late to your presentation just to throw you off your game.

In a recent survey of 2,000 adults across the US, 31% said that they had been bullied as adults. They surveyed 9,000 federal employees, and 57% said that they had been bullied in the last two years. And yes, the government has an anti-bullying policy. And obviously, it’s not confined just to the workplace. Adult bullying is just as prevalent at home, in marriages, in our communities, on the street if you’ve ever driven in rush-hour traffic, in politics… It’s everywhere.

And it isn’t the external repercussions that are as significant as the internal impact on the individual, the target, the victim. The emotional and psychological damage to self-worth, to confidence, and to dignity is enormous. I know because I was bullied for most of my life. Not anymore.

Lessons Learned from Being Bullied

And through that journey, I learned three hard-hitting truths about the oppression of adult bullying. The first truth is just how personal it is. Now, adult bullying is not a big deal if you’ve never been bullied. It’s kind of like the difference between major and minor surgery: if I have it, it’s major; you have it, it’s minor. Right?

And that’s the way many people feel about bullying. They’ve never been bullied, they can’t relate, so it must not be that big of a deal. And anti-bullying policy is typically created by those in positions of power who’ve never been bullied. And yes, even when they tell you, “Oh … Don’t let it bother you,” that is personal.

Psychotherapist Jenise Harmon suggests that bullying is not about you. “You’re not the one with the problems, so you shouldn’t ever take bullying personally.” Excuse me, counselor, with all due respect, when you’re the one getting punched every day, it’s personal. When a co-worker accuses you of saying something you didn’t say, his problem just became your problem. When a bullying husband tells his wife every day how worthless she is, it’s personal.

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The second hard-hitting truth about adult bullying is how helpless you feel. The real issue isn’t the bullies; it’s the fear, it’s the feeling of helplessness to do anything about it.