“We are all weird,” writes Seth Godin. And in that statement might just be the way to end bullying.
—
Bullies aren’t welcome. For every bully, there are a dozen or a hundred workers/kids/individuals that would prefer not to be bullied. Given these overwhelming odds, how do bullies continue to get away with it?
Bullying is what happens when an individual with power exercises that power against people who don’t fit in. By threatening to expose or harm or degrade the outlier, the bully reinforces the status quo in a way that increases his power. [Physical bullying is a different phenomenon… I’m mostly writing here about emotional bullying.]
“I will punish you because you don’t fit in, and I will continue to punish you until you do.”
Bullying persists when bureaucracies and hierarchies permit it to continue. It’s easier to keep order in an environment where bullying can thrive (and vice versa), because the very things that permit a few to control the rest also permit bullies to do their work. The bully uses the organization’s desire for conformity to his own ends.
When students are given permission to be their best selves, they take it, just as you and I would like to. Because, it’s true, we are all weird. When there isn’t a race to fit in the most, bullying those that don’t fit in loses much of its power.
This is incredibly brave and risky for those in charge. It involves trusting people to become something wonderful, as opposed to insisting that they fit in at all costs.
We’re all a lot weirder than we’d like the world to know. Given the chance, we can share that weirdness and run with it. It’s our best shot at a world with art, and a world without bullies. (More here, but even better, go do this in your organization…)
—
photos: (main) purplelover / flickr , (inset) author
—
Subscribe to Seth Godin’s blog, here.