Thursday, March 01, 2007

Odd Girl Out

Today, on my day off from work in celebration of Independence Movement Day, I have to admit that I've spent most of the day curled up with a book. I’m currently reading Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls by Rachel Simmons, which I honestly think everyone should read – especially parents of girls. It’s about the ways in which girls deal with anger and aggression, as opposed to the ways in which boys do. The premise is that boys tend to be more direct in their aggression - physical confrontation - while in contrast, girls use an indirect approach known as relational aggression. Wikipedia's definition of relational aggression is a form of aggression where the group is used as a weapon to assault others and others' relationships. It uses lies, secrets, betrayals and a host of other two-faced tactics to destroy or damage the relationships and social standing of others in the group. [wikipedia article] To be honest, reading this book has brought up a lot of memories. The following is the most vivid.

When I was little, I was an incredibly outgoing kid. I would talk to just about anybody, anywhere. I didn’t worry about making friends; it was just something that happened as I went along. I was very outspoken, too.

That all changed in the third grade. Even though I’m now 28 years old, my third grade year still ranks as one of the worst in my life. Third grade actually started off quite well. T. and H., girls who had been two of my best friends for several years, were in my class. There were also other girls in my class whom I easily befriended. One of these girls was K.

K was a year older than the rest of us; her mother had requested that she be held back, that she repeat the third grade, because she didn’t feel her daughter was mature enough to enter the fourth grade. If only her mother hadn’t made that decision, I probably would have turned out to be a very different person. At the beginning of the year, K became friends with H., T. and me. My birthday was in September, and that year I had my first ever birthday party. I invited six girls, and K. was one of them. We all had a great time.

One day in early October, during recess, as I was approaching T. and K., I heard them talking; they didn’t notice me behind them. K. was asking T. to play with her that day, and specifically asking her *not* to play with H., and T. agreed. I didn’t say anything to them; instead, I went and found H., and repeated the story to her. We concocted a plan to have T. and K. overhear H. asking me not to play with K. We put our plan into action, and that act of retribution was how one of the worst periods of my life began.

Immediately, K. began turning the rest of the class against us. She made up stories about us, told lies to other students about us, and once even told lies about me to my mother (who was a classroom volunteer). Instead of playing K’s game and trying to turn others against her, we simply defended ourselves; yet her campaign of hate was successful. Within a week, my third grade experience had gone from being great to being hell. Additionally, H. and I were enrolled in our school’s Gifted program. This meant that once a week she and I went to a special Gifted class, instead of to regular class with everyone else. For this, K. denounced us as nerds, and said that because we were “Gifted”, we thought we were better than everybody else. In addition to being nerds, she claimed that we were weird, strange, and not the sort of person one should be friends with. Suddenly no one in my class liked me and H. People whom I had liked now refused to talk to me – or if they did talk to me, it was only to call me names or to threaten me. Then, to make matters worse, I got glasses. I certainly need glasses – and I needed them back then – but nothing gives third graders ammunition like glasses. I was taunted relentlessly, and called Four Eyes more times than I could count. I had my glasses snatched off my face during recess. I had them held over my head, just out of reach (I have always been short).

I don’t know if my third grade teacher knew what was going on or not. One thing was certain: K. was one of my teacher’s favorites. K. had been in that class during her first time through third grade. As I mentioned above, she hadn’t failed the third grade; in fact, her grades had been quite decent. As such, she didn’t need to learn the third grade curriculum. Instead, the teacher drafted her to be somewhat of a teacher’s aide, a classroom watchman, and all about helper. Several times I was lectured by my teacher for various actions (both real and imaginary) reported to my teacher by K. The few attempts I made to convince the teacher that K was the one causing problems were met by disbelief and/or the advice of “Don’t be a tattle-tale.”

I had started the third grade outgoing, friendly, willing to strike up a conversation with anybody, and always willing to speak my mind. By the end of the year I was quiet, introverted, speaking only to my closest friends, and often only when spoken to.

I’m 28 now; the events that happened above occurred nineteen years ago, and yet I still think about them periodically. I wonder what my life would have been like had K gone into the fourth grade that year. Or if H. and I hadn’t gone through our retaliatory charade. Or if my teacher had done something to stop K’s behavior. Would I have continued to be gregariously outgoing all through my school years? Would I have lived my life differently? Would I still have become the socially anxious oddball that I am now?

15 comments:

Catherine said...

You might not have grown up to love travel as much as you do if you had not been bullied as a child. This is just my opinion, but I tink that those who have never experienced social isolation come to rely on their friendships for their happiness and beleive that they would not be able to get by without their social circles. But those who have been isolated and have grown up to be stable (if slightly eccentric) adults have had the opportunity to learn that they are strong enough to get by mostly on their own. We can step outside of our group of friends to find adventure, and then come back later.

Anonymous said...

Humm,

Since I think that I was in your third grade class though I am not sure, I would love to know who all three of those persons are. If I was not in your third grade class, I would still probably know them anyways. That is an intresting story. I remeber fourth grade as being pretty bad, but fifth ranked right up there at the top as well but for a variety of different reasons. I do believe that every experience forges you into the person that you are, so I would not play the what if game too much. Your a great, smart, and intelligent person. I also think that you are pretty outgoing as well.

Christopher

Anonymous said...

But I love the socially anxious oddball that you are! :)

My 8th grade year was a bit like that. I never really had any close friends when I was younger because we were always moving -- as such there was no one to "turn against" me. In 8th grade though this one guy started being really mean to me at the bus stop and then told all of his friends at school (mostly girls) and they started being mean to me too. I had made one really good friend, A., and I was always terrified that she was going finally notice that she was too cool to be friends with me. That was when I started smoking. Just like out of an after school special, A. smoked and I wanted her to think that I was cool too! How stupid! I used to get so upset about having to go to school that I would throw up in the mornings. I even begged my mom to homeschool me (can you imagine the horror?)! Luckily the next year I moved to LC and met the Round Floor. :)

Also, I think that we should hunt down K. now and enact revenge!

Melssa

annie said...

Catherine may very well be right. I have no way of knowing what sort of person I would have turned out to be had third grade gone differently. Despite the fact that that year was so horrible - and despite the fact that I have had other terrible times over the years - I don't have any desire to go back and change how things happened, because I am who I am today because of it. Nonetheless, it would still be interesting to catch a glimpse of what things would be like had that one incident not happened.

Chris - I'm only "outgoing" with people I know really well. Like you :-)

Melissa - I'm glad we met you too!

Also, near the very end of my senior year of high school, I saw K for the last time. She was walking across the Commons, with her face red and eyes puffy, and she was crying hysterically. I remember feeling really good about seeing her like that, thinking, "That's what you deserve, you bitch!" Although if you think back to my lack of sanity during our senior year, she might very well have had a similar "final glimpse" of me. If she did, I wonder what, if anything, she thought.

Anonymous said...

That's pretty awful, Jane. I wonder how much any of us end up affected by things that happen in elementary school. I didn't have too bad a time, though I did move. I remember everyone (ie, all the popular girls) was really nice to me for the first week I was at their school. And then it was somehow decided that I wasn't worthy of being their friend. I wonder what their criteria were. It worked out in the end, as I moved back to LC (yes, moving BACK to LC was POSITIVE). But I still think about those middle-school slights and the terror of a back-stabbing "friend" my freshman year.

And I have very vivid nightmares about band. Regularly.

I don't think we can overestimate how painful childhood can be, though its long-term impact is debatable.

(And, yeah, I am totally down with you feeling good about K. crying. I still see some people around in LC who tortured me, one way or another. I always love to observe what's gone wrong for them. And I relish the opportunity to snub former student council members. It's nothing to brag about, but it is true.)

Rob said...

But those who have been isolated and have grown up to be stable (if slightly eccentric) adults have had the opportunity to learn that they are strong enough to get by mostly on their own.

I totally agree with this. Isolation in moderation can strengthen a person’s ability to have faith in themselves. They know it doesn't matter where they are they are strong enough to succeed. Also being by yourself can lead to creating fun new ways to be entertained.

thinking, "That's what you deserve, you bitch!"

Ruthless! ;)

annie said...

Caitlin - I'm glad you moved back to LC for the perfectly selfish reason that it allowed us to become friends. I haven't had any nightmares about band in a long time, thankfully. Let's hope this doesn't inspire one!

dj - I am definitely a very independent person, and I certainly enjoy spending quality time alone with ME. While I love my friends, I am glad that I do not feel the need to surround myself with people at all times. (Er, possibly because I would suck at that.) And yes, definitely rutheless... and a little crazy, considering that it had been nine years at that point!

Brooke said...

I taught third grade for six months, and my God kids are cruel at that age. Especially the girls. The thing is, their prefrontal cortexes are just developing to the point that they can understand how their actions affect others. They're flexing their little social muscles and seeing what happens. I'm not saying that to diminish what happened to you--my sister went through something similar, and it was very difficult for her--but just to bring up that it is a function of that age group to be cruel and hopefully to learn from it.

Jane, I don't remember if you were with with us--I think it was on the train to Riga--that Kelli was reading Cold Mountain and the author says that a person who is perfectly content would never travel, that travel is essentially a person seeking something he lacks at home. If so, I say hurrah for incompleteness!

annie said...

Brooke - While that wasn't brought up in the book, it's interesting to note that a lot (although certainly not all) of the girls' bad experiences - including the one that happened to the author, prompting her to do this research in the first place - happened around 3rd-4th grade. Also, I've read that 3rd grade is the most frequently failed grade. I wonder if there's some connection?

Also, sadly, I didn't go to Riga (was that when Misha and I were roaming about Moscow?), but seriously, hooray for incompleteness!

annie said...

Yep, Mrs. Taylor. I sent you an email w/ the names of H, K and T.

It's amazing how that book triggers such vivid memories! Obviously, the things described in the book are incredibly common.

Anonymous said...

Life's a combination of the adages that “Life Isn't Fair,” “We are the Sum of Our Experiences,” and “We are Continually Learning and Growing.” That said, I still say and do things that I shouldn't and offend people—sometimes inadvertently and other times openly—but so is life. Full of ups and downs. We never seem to harp on the good things—it's only the bad that we hold on to and wrench for all we can. I see problems all around me—all the time, but I'm grateful that I live in today's world with all of our modern technologies and conveniences, and that I was born in a country that allows me a great many freedoms (I still yearn for a great many more, but Rome wasn't built in a day and the U.S. hasn't been around for very long in the history of the world. We seem to forget that in our instant gratification, and demanding, society.). Could I have survived 100, 1,000, or 10,000 years ago without medicine, computers, TV, movies, cell phones, electricity, air conditioning, heat, showers, cars, etc.? I don't think I would have lasted very long with my extremely bad eyesight, fondness of warm bedding for sleeping, and love of television as a means of escapism. Nice topic by the way.

John from Daejeon

Sean said...

Related note: based on memories of childhood and discussions since, it seems that the presence of boys seems to mitigate girl-girl antagonism, whereas the presence of girls seems to aggravate boy-boy antagonism.

annie said...

sean - that might be true in elementary school (where, as we all know, boys had cooties), but from personal experience and from the examples in the book, the presence of boys does a lot to aggravate girl-girl antagonism once they hit middle school.

Unknown said...

socially anxious oddballs rule jane.

Anonymous said...

think of it this way if you would had me back in the day you wouldnt have worried about any of that crap ;) this little weirdo would have showed you how to handle those kind of people haha

never drown yourself in the past it has already been set. change your course of the future and you will feel the freedom come back to you.

in translation stick with me kid your going to go far

Alex Doty (the german)