Lodi News-Sentinel

Cyberbully­ing solutions

- ANNIE LANE

Dear Annie: This is about the young girl who was being bullied by some schoolgirl­s. Our daughter got bullied, and I want to share how my wife handled it. She invited the mothers and daughters over for coffee and dessert. She made it clear the invitation was mandatory. They all came. It was a nice meeting.

She explained what was going on and why bullying is unacceptab­le. If it didn’t stop, she said, she would take further action, and no one wants that to happen. The mothers were surprised to hear what their daughters were doing. It not only stopped, but the girls all became friends. I’m sure all their lives changed. Bullying can scar some people for life. — A Solution

Dear Solution: It’s amazing that your wife took the high road and taught your daughter to do the same. It is good that the bully and her mother showed up. If they had refused, more serious action like letting the school know would have been mandatory.

Many readers reacted to this column. Read on to see more letters on cyberbully­ing.

Dear Annie: You missed one important piece of advice to Concerned Mother about her daughter being cyberbulli­ed. Contact her school. Most schools have programs in place to deal with students who engage in cyberbully­ing. The mother and daughter are obligated to try and prevent this from happening to others, and the school needs to be made aware that this is happening, even though it didn’t take place in a classroom setting. — School First

Dear Annie: I would like to add to your response to Concerned Mother, whose 14-year-old daughter was bullied over social media by someone she thought was her friend.

I think you missed an opportunit­y to teach both girls a life lesson. The parents of this young lady, in my view, should have reached out to the other girl’s parents in person to talk about what their daughter is doing on social media. They might be unaware. It would give them a chance to hold their daughter accountabl­e for a very negative behavior. It would also teach the girl who was victimized how to stand up for herself in an appropriat­e way.

It might be better if the parents, after talking, arranged an in-person meeting between all four parents and the two girls, to talk about accountabi­lity for rude, hurtful behaviors and the full impact they can have on another human being. I would want to know if my child did that to another.

There would definitely be consequenc­es, such as no social media for a while, no phone, monitoring her posts and contacts, as well as therapy.

If my daughter was the victim, I would have therapy for her as well.

As parents, our job is to teach our children how to be good people with integrity. We need to teach by example, with love. — Empathic Parent

Dear Empathic Parent: Thank you for your letter. I love the idea of taking a hurtful situation and turning it into a learning opportunit­y. That is the only way we can stop bullying from taking place.

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