The Borneo Post

‘Girl talk’? Let’s get real: This is bullying.

- By Karla L. Miller

QUESTION: I work in an elementary school with predominan­tly female teachers. Some of the ones I work in close quarters with enjoy gossiping about female colleagues. I do not partake in the “girl talk.”

Several women have gotten very catty, being rude and condescend­ing to me. It has started to make my job, which I love, stressful. I wake up dreading the day ahead.

I thought about discussing these issues with the principal, but the principal is close with a major member of the clique. I also fear the school will not keep me if I start complainin­g. Other women refuse to speak up for the same reason.

I started eating lunch with the few male teachers here. To my knowledge, they don’t gossip about other teachers.

In an age when women are celebratin­g sisterhood, I am upset that some feel the need to bring other women down. It feels as if I am back in high school, with the cafeteria hierarchy. Is there anything I can do to make the social situation bearable?

Answer: Shockingly, my fi rst recommenda­tion is not to make this about gender.

Characteri­sing bad behaviour as “catty” or “girl talk” isn’t just facile stereotypi­ng. It also makes that behaviour easier to dismiss and diminish. Even “gossip” doesn’t convey the enormity of engaging in slander or violation of privacy - and the term tends to be applied indiscrimi­nately to every watercoole­r confab between women even though, yes, men do it, too. I understand the temptation to buzz about queen B’s - but remember, your sample size skews “predominan­tly female.” And as you point out, other women at your workplace share your concerns.

So let’s shed the genderload­ed terms and call this toxic behaviour by its name: bullying.

Bullying is perpetrate­d by insecure people - of all sexes, ages, races and faiths - against people they consider a threat to their success and status. Bullies tend to go with whatever weapon, subtle or overt, seems most effective: physical intimidati­on, rumours, verbal abuse, ostracism.

But you and like-minded colleagues can make your environmen­t inhospitab­le to bullying. Offer colleagues (even the “mean” ones) friendly words, help and kudos for their achievemen­ts. When someone pitches trash talk, bunt it away with a change of subject or a kind word about the intended target. When someone is rude to you, respond as you see fit: Shrug it off, crack a joke, or play it straight and explain, as though you have no idea what was intended, that you found that comment hurtful.

Unfortunat­ely, defeating workplace bullying depends largely on the employer’s willingnes­s to address the problem - unlikely if the top brass supports or fears the ringleader­s. But the warmer and more supportive your environmen­t is, the more bullies will be exposed as outliers, and the more leverage you and your coalition will have if you need to escalate the matter.

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