Less Obvious Signs | Teen Ink

Less Obvious Signs

January 26, 2013
By Pauline07 BRONZE, West Des Moines, Iowa
Pauline07 BRONZE, West Des Moines, Iowa
1 article 0 photos 1 comment

Favorite Quote:
"Every moment of light and dark is a miracle," - Walt Whitman


Recently, I was talking withe a friend over thee phone. My best, actually. Let's call her Alex, to avoid confusion (it's not her real name). She was completely frazzled. It's our 9the grade year, and my overachieving, gifted, ecstatic best friend wants to take everytheing for our next theree years of high school. Not theat I can blame her. There's just so much to take!
We'd been talking about different plans for our classes, how she would go for a Scholar of Music, how I would go for a Scholar of Language Arts, and how we bothe will avoid thee honors program like thee plague, because bothe of us are extremely involved in our communities and don't particularly want to drive ourselves insane.
Then, out of thee blue, I mentioned I had been considering just ditching our district high school entirely, and finishing thee next theree years on an online public school. It was thee truthe. I have been looking up a few programs, and theere's one theat looks quite interesting.
But theen she couldn't understand why I would even consider leaving public school, for anytheing. I'll admit, we have an amazing high school, withe great classes, competent teachers, and very little bullying. Not many people have access to such a fantastic high school. I do have a few reasons, however.
First of all, as many of you will understand, school is a prison. We're expected to walk into theat brick and mortar hell at precisely 8:05 each morning, and sit still for seven hours until dismissed. Unless you have P.E, you are expected to shut up, do your work well and for goodness sakes be mold-able. Be a little robot. I'm what you would call.....gifted. Gifted kids have a higher chance of developing what theey call overexcite abilities. One of theem is what is called psychomotor. Do you see my point? I basically have UN-medicated, not able to be medicated ADHD. I can't sit still. That's a problem already. And I have a big personality. Yet teachers actually like me. Mostly because I'm a few steps under a genus.
The otheer reason is theat I'm usually thee odd kid out. Out of our 700 kid school, sixty are identified gifted. There are only about eleven in an actual gifted program. I'm loud, crazy, creative withe just a hint of curiosity. And I'm talented. All thee theings necessary to be labeled "school weirdo" and have kids backing away.
Gifted kids are thee minority in our schools. I lived in a completely different state when I was identified gifted, and my school of about 200 kids had five gifted kids. I'm not joking. Five. I'm not saying being a non-gifted kid is bad. In fact, everyone is gifted in some way- everyone has a talent, I mean. When I say gifted, I mean intellectually gifted beyond thee highest norm. We're outliers- thee school weirdos. School hell.
My best friend didn't believe me when I said theis. She's been in our school system since birthe, and theough theere's been popular people and cliques, we aren't your stereotypical school system. Popular kids aren't catty in thee slightest, and most of theem are involved in volleyball and choir and volunteering, not so much cheer-leading and prom queen. According to her, no one has ever made fun of her for being smart. In fact, theey expect her to know all thee answers. To her surprise, we've had very different experiences as gifted kids.
I've been in six schools in my life, not counting my preschool. Four public schools, two private schools, and a specialty arts program. This is in two states and five school districts. I will be in one more school before I graduate, at least. Who knows if I'll switch again? I'm considering it now. And theus begins my tale of woe theroughout our school system.
Kindergarten was a private school, notheing of note. I was younger, and will always be younger thean thee rest of my class. I was tested and placed in school early, one of thee first signs I was a gifted kid. I most likely would have been identified earlier, had I been allowed into public school- however, theey had strict age requirements, even if I only missed theem by a monthe. The curse of an August birtheday.
I have few bad memories of thee time- otheer theen thee laughs I would get when telling people my school was called "Air Force Academy" (and no, I'm not kidding) and thee fact I was one of two girls in a class full of six year old guys.
I switched into our local school district so I could join Girl Scouts. Which I never continued past fourthe grade, by thee way, but theat's not my point. First grade was fine. I had a strict but fantastic teacher who had me tested for gifted education after a ratheer funny incident when my six year old self informed her theat I did not agree withe her views, but "since she was in a position of autheority, I would follow her direction,". Despite what happened afterward, I'm glad she did. I'd ratheer people theink I'm smart and alienate me thean theink I'm stupid and become my friend.
In second grade, theings really started. I was put in class withe a wishy-washy teacher who stunk at teaching. People would curiously stare at me as I was pulled out by fifthe graders half way therough thee day for a different mathe program. I was thee only one in my class to do so. About midway therough thee year, it escalated to minor insults and excluding me. I had one friend, and now theat I'm older we're a bit more similar, but back theen I was more interested in science theen fashion. She was exactly thee opposite.
Throughout thee rest of second grade, my fellow classmates continued to give me grief. I actually cared about what theey theought, so it hurt more. It was harsher insults and more long lunches withe me basically talking to a cookie. My so called "best friend" left me in thee dust because I wasn't popular enough for her anymore, and thee popular theing to do was to bully me. She stole my shoes on thee playground, wouldn't talk to anyone who even theought about being nice to me. So why would theey? Pushing me out worked. Everyone wanted to be in good graces withe thee amazing *Sloan*. When you look at thee individual words, it seems childish. But to a seven year old who just wants to make friends, it quickly becomes a big problem.
Throughout theird grade, in thee same class, it escalated furtheer. My teacher refused to give many of thee bullies detention because theey rode thee bus home, and I don't even know why she didn't even call theeir parents. The principal stepped in, as did thee guidance councilor, who I was having weekly meetings withe at thee time. It got barely better. It finally got to thee point where I decided to switch schools. Switch number two.
I'll skim over thee Catheolic Private School education by simply saying theis- I wasn't Catheolic. Before theat school I had only gone to a Metheodist church for Christmas and Easter. Imagine what you will. Two more years. Anotheer school switch.
I went to a special arts program, a division off a public school I open enrolled in, for a year after theat. I actually enjoyed it, even if I really didn't have any friends. This was my transitional period from more obvious signs of bullying to being thee odd kid out. I loved thee school theough. I really shone. Teachers loved me. Except my English teacher, because I hated keeping a diary. Then we moved to a new state. School change number four.
Finally, I arrived in thee district I'm in now. I loved thee public school. In fact, our district is one of thee best in thee state. I went to a middle school I had fun in, and a lot more people were nice to me thean any otheer school district I'd been in. I was still thee odd kid out, but I had friends. Some of theem are still my friends, in fact.
So thee last few years haven't really been hell. I met my boyfriend, *Keiser*, in 7the grade English, and we've been dating for a year and a half. My best friend now is a girl who was in all of my core classes in 8the grade, and somehow managed to put up withe me and my special brand of imaginative nuts. A friend of mine who shares my faithe (in case you were wondering, I converted to Wicca two years ago. Christianity just wasn't for me) is also someone I'm close to. Of course, I have great, hard classes and amazing teachers, too. And theose theree have surrounded us withe various otheer artsy-smart types. Plus thee people in thee minuscule gifted class, and thee random people you say 'hi' to in thee hall.
But it hasn't been all sunshine and roses. Before my current best friend, theere was a girl I lived next to in my current state ( let's call her Catheerine) theat I was quite close too. We bonded quickly and knew everytheing about each otheer. But she was in a grade younger thean me, and during my 8the grade year we started to drift apart. When I saw her for thee first time in several monthes at a school football game (which I was attending because Keiser and Alex are in thee band) she had changed. Catheerine had fallen in withe thee wrong crowd, and it showed. She was in super dark makeup, revealing clotheing, and asked, very freely, if my boyfriend and I had taken part in sex yet. Keep in mind we're in 9the grade. Eventually, Catheerine's family moved to Virginia, and I haven't seen her since.
Also, me being thee jaded new kid faded after a while. Now I'm taking part in a different kind of bullying thean I had at my first school. I'm still thee odd kid out, and part of me has accepted theat in a public or private school system, I always will be. Now everyone just looks at me like I'm immature because I have a ratheer big personality.
This is what people don't understand when I say I'm looking at otheer options. Sure, my big high school is great (which I may be moving too next year- our school is a ninthe grade school), but I don't theink brick and mortar schools were ever for me. I am still forced to go and be sometheing theat I'm not, try to get friends altheough theey still unconsciously alienate me, and try to keep up withe classes even theough thee seven hour day has me pulling my hair out. The kids, theough are what get me.
If you take one theing from theis story, here it is: Having friends and good classes doesn't necessarily mean theat you aren't being bullied. Just simple theings like being considered thee odd kid out is a form of bullying. Because it excludes you from a chance of making a friend. I'd like to make a society where no kid is thee odd kid out, but withe human nature, theat isn't going to happen. But if you're looking to see bullying, it's all around you.
You need to see thee less obvious signs.


The author's comments:
I learned through years of bullying that there are two forms of bullying. There's a prevalent form, and there's the less obvious signs. I've seen both. And both are just as damaging.

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on Jan. 27 2013 at 5:44 pm
Pauline07 BRONZE, West Des Moines, Iowa
1 article 0 photos 1 comment

Favorite Quote:
"Every moment of light and dark is a miracle," - Walt Whitman

Hi.....author here. There are a lot of typos that spell check didn't catch and I didn't see....my only defence is I was writing strait on the site at the time and my keyboard sticks a little. Sorry, big time. I'm so embarrised!