Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Jarrah Hodge

GET UPDATES FROM Jarrah Hodge
 

Calling It 'Bullying' Doesn't Do Amanda Todd Justice

Posted: 10/13/2012 11:34 pm

Talking about the suicide of 15-year-old Amanda Todd, it's tempting to look for quick answers, to condemn the technology she was using, to believe we can prevent future Amandas from making the same choice by speaking out against "bullying."

But calling it "bullying" or even "cyberbullying" doesn't do it justice. "Bullying" erases specific social factors and makes it seem like something that you age out of. Adding the "cyber" prefix doesn't necessarily make it more accurate. Technology was a catalyst, but webcams, cellphones, and the Internet aren't the key to understanding what happened to Amanda; systemic sexism is.

Girls in North America are under incredible pressure and subject to conflicting messages. On the one hand you're told to protect your purity in order to maintain your reputation. On the other hand, practically all the role models around you in the media -- in romantic comedies, advertising, even Disney movies- - are telling you that your worth is based on your desirability. You get the message that you are nothing without a boyfriend.

Danielle Paradis at Flurt! sums it up like this: "The prevalent culture around her sends mixed messages, such as take your clothes off to get the affection you desire, but don't do it in the wrong way or with the wrong people or you'll be seen as a dirty, worthless whore."

The men Todd met online told her she was "stunning" and "beautiful". That's why I have a hard time seeing Amanda and others talk about what she did as "mistakes" -- because it's so understandable given the context.

As Krissy Darch wrote in her outstanding piece on this issue, "In a context in which women are told in manifold ways that everything about them is wrong -- their emotions, their bodies, their fat, their lack of fat, their developing, their aging--when someone comes along and tells you that you are perfect and beautiful, that's some powerful stuff.

Meanwhile, boys are generally taught that there's no need to respect women and that one way to prove your masculinity is through sexual conquest of women (this is also tied in with homophobia as men police each others' masculinity with pressure to "prove" they're not gay).

The gendered pressures and expectations put on boys and girls are a system of systemic sexism in which kids like Amanda are collateral damage.

Blog continues after gallery

Loading Slideshow...
  • A Facebook post from <a href="https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151108737498527&set=pb.245559443526.-2207520000.1349995284&type=1&theater">G Force Gym - Home of the Vancouver All Stars</a>: "Today we feel the loss of our former VAS family member Amanda... I ask that we all watch her video and share her story so that her loss is not in vain. Allow this to be her legacy... Allow us all to look around & find the next Amanda before another precious spunky teenager is lost. We have a responsibility today... Is there a kid in your school that made a mistake and is being shunned? Your challenge is to be a LEADER ... Be the Game Changers you are and sit with them today... reach out... smile... let them know that they are NOT alone in this harsh world. It's always EASY to do the EASY thing; we teach you to NOT do what is easy and instead, do what is right!! You will be surprised, how many people will follow YOU when you stick up for what is Right and honorable AND, forgiving those that have made mistakes in their YOUTH is the RIGHT thing to do!! Please share Amands's Story... SHARE IT & LIVE IT!"



We saw a similar situation with 13-year-old Megan Meier, who committed suicide after being attacked on MySpace by a former friend posing as a boy. The night she died, Meier told her parents about some of what was happening:

"They are posting bulletins about me. 'Megan Meier is a slut', 'Megan Meier is fat,'" she explained, in tears.

Likewise, in May, 13-year-old Minnesotan Rachel Ehmke also took her own life after months of harassment. She had never even kissed a boy, but she was repeatedly called a "prostitute" by a group of girls and having the word "slut" scrawled across her gym locker.

Many girls like Rachel, Megan and Amanda are stuck in a lose-lose situation: either you're a loser because you can't get a boyfriend or you're a "slut," though as Rachel proves, this label can be attached to you regardless of how you dress or behave. If you're a "slut" you're expected to feel dirty, guilty, inferior, damaged, and not worthy of respect or love.

If you have never been called a slut, try to imagine what it would be like if you were 15 and were convinced to feel this way. As someone who experienced that, I can tell you that I am still trying to fully shake the insecurity more than a decade later.

Instead of calling it bullying, which brings to mind "kids being kids," we can call it sexual harassment, or we can call it technology-facilitated slut-shaming.

But no matter what, if we don't take seriously the systemic gender inequality underlying these cases, if we don't teach boys to respect girls and girls to respect themselves, there will continue to be girls who slip through the cracks.

 

Follow Jarrah Hodge on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jarrahpenguin

FOLLOW CANADA ALBERTA
Talking about the suicide of 15-year-old Amanda Todd, it's tempting to look for quick answers, to condemn the technology she was using, to believe we can prevent future Amandas from making the same ch...
Talking about the suicide of 15-year-old Amanda Todd, it's tempting to look for quick answers, to condemn the technology she was using, to believe we can prevent future Amandas from making the same ch...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 93
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
09:48 AM on 10/19/2012
"Bullying" needs to join the list of most used words of 2012.
02:23 AM on 10/17/2012
Sadly bullying is a catchall phrase used to describe a person being harassed by others. Legally it should be broken up into categories under which charges would be filed. Amanda said angry girls attacked her... that would be physical assault which charges could be filed under. The man distributed nude pics of her that he captured when she flashed him, he should have possession of child porn and child porn distributation charges brought up on him. Any adults involved in the harassment of Amanda should be ashamed. Yes she made a mistake and flashed a virtual stranger but arent we all supposed to learn from our mistakes? So often people want second chances for themselves but are willing to condemn others over the first mistake.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ColoradoBMan
04:11 PM on 10/16/2012
I'd like to add that often times to much emphasis is interred upon the person doing the typing...for example think of the tenses you can project with just speaking for example: screw off? Depending on who you are talking to or the tone of your voice (type) it can be received in multiple ways. Sadly typing does not denote your tone so whose to say what was typed was meant to be interpreted as bullying? But perhaps it was meant that way then what comes to mind is how much validity this type of media has. If you are on a social media site and you live by the social media than you are already a victim, IMO. See if you dont live and die by the social media you can simply chose to walk away or simply ignore. Regrettably Amanda is not the first to suffer or end her life and sadly she won't be the last. What needs to be shared is that words are simply words. If you take them to heart you become the victim. Don't let them inflict injury but help empower you. You define you future...IMO
photo
Ayla87
Don't Delete Me Bro!
12:45 PM on 10/16/2012
I still want to know why the adult man who started this whole thing hasn't been caught and brought on on felony Child Porn charges.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
halcyondaze
12:11 PM on 10/16/2012
Bullying has been a time honored tradition far too long and too many parents think its okay for their children to harass other kids and make their lives miserable. It's even easier to do it now with the Internet. Nothing is going to change until attitudes change and judging from comments (and even parts of this blog), that probably isn't going to happen anytime soon.
11:04 AM on 10/16/2012
Interesting take on boys being taught to disrespect women, Ms Feminist blogger Hodge. That is a pretty general statement and it would be interesting to see if you could back it up, because being male and growing up with a lot of other males I did not experience anything of the sort.
01:19 PM on 10/16/2012
I think she means encouraged (mostly by peers) not so much taught, and as a male that grew up around other males I can assure you she's spot on in her assessment (especially in regards to the U.S.)
12:12 PM on 10/18/2012
Writing as a pensioner I would have to say that most of us males were taught to have the utmost respect for women, and were shamed if we acted otherwise. But then times change, don't they.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:23 PM on 10/16/2012
It's because you're not paying attention profbit.
12:56 PM on 10/18/2012
Either that or I lived a sheltered life. Don't get me wrong: there was bullying, but as I recall (from 60 years ago) there were few occasions of boys bullying girls. With the passage of time we have certainly learned a lot, and the internet has made much more despicable behaviour possible.
11:44 PM on 10/15/2012
Here in the states boys between the ages of 9-12 commit suicide at two times the rate of girls. Boys 13-18 kill themselves three times more than girls in that age range.These statistics are on the CDC website if you don't believe me. If girls are feeling so hopeless and pressured to commit suicide, what kind of pain and pressure are boys feeling to be so hurting that they commit suicide two to three times more than girls during their teenage years? It seems that even though boys are more often the ones to kill themselves,the only ones we care about are girls. No one asks why do boys feel so hopeless? We need to teach boys to respect girls and girls to respect boys. Only when we respect one another will we see a reduction in the horrible tragedy of suicide.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dizzee
03:10 PM on 10/16/2012
probably these boys are being called gay or faggot which is really heart breaking for the boy/s..society has no idea anymore to be polite and accept people for who they are not what they are
05:30 PM on 10/16/2012
Actually guys tend to be more likely to complete suicide whereas girls are more likely to attempt. Guys generally use more violent means than girls. Trust me, having been studying this for a while, people do pay attention to the guys too.
09:47 PM on 10/15/2012
You just made all this stuff up. Nobody knows who exactly is responsible for bullying her. Don't blame this on guys.

Girls aren't victims of everything either, we need to stand up for ourselves and not be just products of our environment. We need to stand up for ourselves and not bullied into submission.
05:30 PM on 10/16/2012
A guy convinced her to flash him and a guy shared that photo which led to her bullying
paintitblacker
shit happens life goes on
07:13 PM on 10/15/2012
Jarrah ; it's worse than you think ,but I don't see it as a gender specific. Special needs kids are also taunted , till even they take their own life . Just last year an 11 yr old boy ? not to mention teenagers coming out , and it not just boys as the aggressors.
seems to me the youth of today is in a state of disconnect ,they merely drop in to eat then go back into there virtual world , I have 3 grandchildren ,that will grow up in hi/fi mediums of farm ville and face book .
where did it all go sideways?
sexism in advertising?
kardashians?
paparazzi
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:11 PM on 10/15/2012
I know this sounds hard hearted, but the old saying about sticks and stones is true. Children need to be taught that the words of others are just words. Adolescence is hard, and kids will be psychologically and physically picked on. We must do a better job of helping our kids to get resilient. Stopping bullying is an impossible task. It is the reflection of the ugly side of human nature and thus there is no getting rid of it.
08:05 AM on 10/16/2012
Sticks and Stones may break my bones but words will forever hurt you. That is how the saying should be! Coming from someone who has been verbally abused before I know that I would have rather been beaten up. To this day I am still trying to change my self because of what people told me. So I respect your opinion and I know that everyone is entitled to their own but I would have to disagree with you on your comment.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dizzee
03:12 PM on 10/16/2012
i hear you and agree. same here
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:22 AM on 10/17/2012
But honestly, wouldn't you be better off if you had learned to ignore the negative words of others?
03:06 PM on 10/15/2012
Suicide is most likely caused by depression. Perhaps understanding depression and in its fast paced intense emotional teenage expression of it is better for the individuals afflicted than using it as an object lesson in sex politics. If female teens committed suicide in an abnormal proportion to to their Male counterparts it might warrrant more speculation into social influences based on sex disparities..But the statistics don't show that? Suicide like depression is very individual as is its treatment.. And as their is a direct and proven correlation between Suicide and Suicide reporting I think it's unethical for journalists to use these reports to generate Money. Unless the person is newsworthy for something other than their illness you don't report it!Period...Reporting suicide Increases suicide ideation in those susceptible to it... FACT!
08:08 AM on 10/16/2012
Kids that are depressed may start killing themselves just for the attention they may get. So if I read your comment correctly I must agree with you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dizzee
03:14 PM on 10/16/2012
Well stated and thank you for your comment..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bethab
12:15 PM on 10/15/2012
Parents of bullied kids need to start getting the police involved.
04:57 PM on 10/15/2012
They do. But it boils down to he said/she said, and schools not wanting to deal with it. We are assisting a young lady right now, who is terrified to go to school in NC. She has a male bully who slammed her into a locker He went up behind her and said rape starts now. The principal called the boy into the office, and he said her going into the locker was an accident. He was made to apologized to the young lady and she was told to "accept the apology and put it behind her." Mom has gone to the police to press charges against the boy, and we have gone to the school board on her behalf. Unfortunately, we are probably going to have to go a lot further than this to make sure this girl is protected.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bethab
11:50 AM on 10/16/2012
Not all schools are like that. Many schools desperately want to do something about it. The fact is, that school heard a specific threat against a student and did nothing about it. In my opinion, the family should sue the school in addition to filing a police complaint. This is absolutely nauseating.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:08 PM on 10/16/2012
This is why there needs to be surveillance cameras in school, then the she-said-he-said won't hold up anymore. It would also protect kids from sexual abuse from their teachers. It's a win-win situation!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AmrcnWmn
09:54 AM on 10/15/2012
Bullying = an adults interpretation of thier childs behavior as an stalker, abuser, harrasser and alot of times ends with assault. There are laws to protect against and punish for these crimes and should be used.

Stop calling it bullying, just because a young teen is considered a kid does not mean they should not be held culpable to the same penalties of the law as an adult would be.

It is however up to parents to teach thier children that certain behaviors have repurcussions under the law, and in the case of Amanda, she had a legal right of protection.
10:36 AM on 10/15/2012
Actually, It's exactly because somebody's a Teenager that they are NOT charged with Adult crimes.
To actually think that a 15 Year old is capable of the same INTENT as an Adult is laughable. Teens don't think about what they're doing. Their brains are not yet equipped to comprehend consequences or intent the way an Adult can. I'm not saying whoever engages in these types of Bullying doesn't deserve to be punished, but NOT as an Adult.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AmrcnWmn
06:53 AM on 10/16/2012
I absolutely do not agree. I raised 5 kids.  They all baby sat, cleaned house, did lawn work, got good grades, did thier laundry and went to the movies and other places unescorted with friends.  None, and I mean None of them got into trouble in thier teens.  They knew the consequense, therefore chose not to.  They also took responsibility for thier actions when they did not do what was right by acknowleding the wrong in some cases but never the less accepting punishment when due. Teens don't think because people give them excuses NOT to think.  A parent sees his three year old child trying to stick a key into a electrical outlet.  Do you stop the child, punish the child and take away the key, or do you just watch and oh well little Johnny is to young to understand repurcussions so let him learn his lesson the hard way?
09:43 AM on 10/15/2012
This is past just bullying. This is a case of persecution and predatory behavior enacted by many people around this young girl. As a society that brags about having all those wonderful values, how can so many people have such a mean spirited attitude toward such a fragile soul... And where are the defense mechanisms to protect the defenseless?
09:42 AM on 10/15/2012
This article makes it so heartbreakingly clear what young women are up against in terms of societal expectations, mixed messages and brutal consequences for failing to act twice their age. This needs to be recognised, and addressed on an urgent basis. Well-written and well-observed - thanks, Jarrah.