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Home » society » Page 9

How to Stop Parental Bullying (3)

In the previous chapter of the bullying series, I started introducing my 50 personal development techniques to help bully parents stop the cycle of bullying.

I believe that “happy parents Raise Happy Kids” and strong and powerful parents raise strong and powerful children that no one can bully or push around. Parents with high emotional intelligence do not bully their own kids to gain power even if they are bullied by someone else.

Each of these tips can make a huge change in family life by itself and help you gain the power you need to parent your kids in a healthy, happy, supportive environment. Use your power wisely!

Read How to Stop Parental Bullying (3) »

Published: May 2, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development, Parenting Tags: bullying, emotional intelligence, kids / children, how to, safety, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, violence, behavior / discipline, change, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, motivation, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, relationships / marriage, practical parenting / parents, social skills, society, aggressive, communication

How to Stop Parental Bullying (2)

Parental bullying reflected in an eye

The previous post of the bullying series talked about stopping bully parents with awareness, because awareness is the first step towards any change. The following posts will show how we can stop bully parents by introducing personal development.

I believe that happy parents raise happy kids and that parents with good emotional skills raise children with good emotional skills, so this will also stop many kids from being bullies and others from being victims.

In the next 10 anti-bullying posts, I will list more than 50 bullying items and expand on some personal development technique to overcome some bullying behavior or help your kids stop being bullies or victims. Consider this your free parent coaching course to recognize, avoid and eliminate bullying from their life.

Some bullying behaviors are much more severe than others, but this activity is not meant to judge you or any other parent. It is there to give you tools to overcome snappy, fearful, aggressive or manipulative behaviors that arise from feeling powerless.

It will help you regain personal power so you do not try to get this power from abusing your kids, your partner or your employees (remember, every bully is also a victim and even if you are feeling like a victim, you may be bullying others).

Read How to Stop Parental Bullying (2) »

Published: April 18, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: March 19, 2021In: Kids / Children, Personal Development, Parenting, Relationships / Marriage Tags: emotional intelligence, bullying, kids / children, how to, safety, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, violence, behavior / discipline, change, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, motivation, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, relationships / marriage, practical parenting / parents, social skills, society, communication, aggressive

How to Stop Parental Bullying

In the last chapter of the bullying series, I wrote about bully parents (some people call them toxic parents) and although I think there is sometimes a fine line between carrying out our parenting responsibility and bullying, there is no doubt that bullying is a cycle that will never end unless we help parents stop it.

Yes, we have law enforcement officers whose job is making sure it does not continue, but if parents stop bullying their kids from fear of the police or the authorities, it will only increase their sense of disempowerment. Their focus will be again on gaining power without the authorities’ knowledge, which will create another cycle of making kids afraid of reporting and worse, hiding their physical injuries and hurts from others. This reduces the support structure available to bullied children and the chances of stopping the bullying or recovering from it.

Parents must stop the bullying cycle not because of the fear of being caught, but because they have gained power and understanding through developing their emotional intelligence. This way, the parents will be happy too.

We must stop the cycle of bullying so that in 10 years, we will talk about it as history and say, “This is what people did in the past, but we are more civilized and in control and we are better parents for our children”. We need to be proud of making a difference.

In this post, I want to help parents discover if they were bullied themselves when they were young and if there is a form of bullying in their home towards their own children.

Read How to Stop Parental Bullying »

Published: April 11, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Personal Development, Parenting, Relationships / Marriage, Kids / Children Tags: how to, safety, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, violence, behavior / discipline, change, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, motivation, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, relationships / marriage, practical parenting / parents, social skills, society, communication, aggressive, emotional intelligence, bullying, kids / children

Bully Parents

Teenage girl looking sadly out the window

Bullying parents are a very dangerous phenomenon in our society, because parents are supposed to be the people who protect their kids from bullying. Yet, as I have described in previous chapters, there are many parents who feel weak and lack the emotional intelligence to maintain a sense of control without bullying someone else. Being smaller and weaker makes kids easy targets for them.

Why are there bully parents?

Parents bully their kids because they have been bullied themselves as children or they are being bullied by someone else (often severely or continuously for a long time – see Workplace Bullying). This creates a never-ending cycle of parents who bully their kids, causing them to grow up and bully their own kids (and other people at work) and so on.

Often, people who have been bullied as children do not realize that their behavior is bullying. When you grow up in a place where bullying is the norm, you accept it as part of life and behave accordingly.

I am sure you have gone to a friend’s home many times and discovered that they ran things differently, which questioned the way things are done in your family. In the past, aggressive behavior, physical violence and abuse of power were part of daily life – kids were physically beaten at school with a cane or denied food or sleep as part of a discipline method that was totally controlled by their parents.

When kids are bullied at home and have never learned ways to resolve conflicts peacefully, they react in an aggressive way when things seem to get out of control with their own kids. Had they lived in a home where the parents set a good example of conflict resolution, they would have developed healthy ways to handle challenges and difficulties.

Read Bully Parents »

Published: April 4, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: March 19, 2021In: Personal Development, Parenting, Relationships / Marriage, Kids / Children Tags: acceptance / judgment / tolerance, violence, behavior / discipline, change, self confidence / self esteem / self worth, motivation, personal development / personal growth / personality development / self improvement, relationships / marriage, practical parenting / parents, social skills, society, communication, aggressive, emotional intelligence, bullying, kids / children, how to, safety

How Organizations Can Stop Bullying (2)

When individuals bully at work, the problem is not as severe as when the organization has a culture that supports bullying. The organization as a bystander can choose to be a defender, protect victims and create a cooperative atmosphere, or to be a major supporter of bullies and increase the problem. Unlike the kids who are bystanders at school, organizational bystanders suffer from the bullying directly through loss of productivity and money.

This chapter includes many tips to help the organization condemn, stop and prevent bullying. Each tip here can make a huge impact on someone’s life and has the potential to stop the bullying cycle – victims feeling powerless and bullying others to regain their power, causing their victims to bully others to regain power and so on.

When I was 15, I had a very special teacher who supervised our school’s student council. He was a very devoted teacher and we felt he really cared for us. One day, I asked him, “Reuben, why do you do this? Why do you work so hard to empower us?”

He said, “If I convince 5 of you to make a change and each of you convinces another 5 who will convince another 5 each, eventually, we will have a better world!”

I am spreading his words. If you are part of an organization, particularly in a leadership position, and you help condemn, stop and prevent bullying towards one person, you will make a difference in the lives of their partner, their children, their grand children, and their great-grand children for generations to come.

We need strong and courageous people to put a stop to this cycle. If we stop one bully and then one more bully, we can gradually change the world. I believe this with all my heart.

Read How Organizations Can Stop Bullying (2) »

Published: March 28, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Success / Wealth, Personal Development Tags: beliefs, violence, behavior / discipline, practical parenting / parents, relationships / marriage, assertive, society, communication, aggressive, success, bullying, emotional intelligence, career, how to, body language, safety, attitude

Sharing and Caring

We have all noticed that human communication and relationships seem to be deteriorating – the rate of divorce is still on the rise, bullying is a worldwide phenomenon and the point of discussion everywhere, young people are staying single longer or choosing not to have kids and let’s not get started on customer service. Things are bad and we know it.

But why is that?

It just so happens that this week, I have had a few opportunities to think about this and I would like to share these thoughts with you.

At a pool party for Noff’s friend, one father complained about his daughter disregard for the high of mobile phone charges and said he was surprised she had been so careless with his money. Another mother spoke of how her daughter used Facebook to splash every little thought in all her friends’ faces without taking into account how they might take it. Both parents were quite frustrated with their kids.

When I was growing up, I was told to be polite and considerate. My parents thought about what others would think about the way I dressed, the way I combed my hair, how I spoke, the grades I got and many other things. They looked me over and made sure I was presentable before I went out the door.

It was all about others. We had to get special permission to think of ourselves.

Read Sharing and Caring »

Published: March 23, 2011 by Gal Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Relationships / Marriage Tags: communication, kids / children, focus, teens / teenagers, emotional intelligence, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, how to, practical parenting / parents, choice, relationships / marriage, social skills, society, lifestyle, family matters, bullying

How Organizations Can Stop Bullying

Bullying at work is a big problem in our society. In fact, many employees are abused regularly as part of their job description. The owner of the business, organization, farm or factory rules everyone and often bullies them on a regular basis. I take my hat off to those courageous people (past and present) who fight for justice and do all they can to prevent this bullying, because it is so widespread and “built in”.

As an organization, the first thing you must understand is that with every bullying incident in your workplace, you lose productivity and, as a result, money. It is in your best interest to stop it and as soon as possible. It may not be easy, but it is a must. In workplaces where there is bullying there are many problems that quickly affect the “bottom line”.

Some companies even close up because they are unable to manage their people properly.

Workplace bullying can be caused by individual factors and cultural factors. It is very important for every organization to understand those factors and address them as a matter of course.

Read How Organizations Can Stop Bullying »

Published: March 21, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Success / Wealth, Personal Development Tags: society, communication, aggressive, success, bullying, emotional intelligence, career, how to, body language, safety, attitude, beliefs, violence, behavior / discipline, practical parenting / parents, relationships / marriage, assertive

Raising Hope … in Uniform?

This post is about school uniforms, but it is also about how parents make decisions in life, especially those related to their children.

I recently found out that the parent body (called Parents & Citizens in QLD or P&C, Parents & Friends or P&F in other places and Parent-Teacher Association or PTA in the US) at my daughter’s school has the authority to choose the school uniform. There was a group of parents sitting around our dining room table, having brought Noff’s classmates for a Whacky Hair party, and a few of them were involved in the P&C. When I mentioned my views on the school’s over-emphasis of dressing “properly”, give the fairly restrictive and grossly outdated uniform code, one of them said, “Then come to the P&C meeting and propose to change the uniform”.

“What?!”

“Yeah, the parents can change the uniform if they want to, so if you convince enough people at the meeting to change, go for it”.

So my first lesson was that we parents have a lot more authority and influence over what our kids go through than we realize. Having worked long hours away from home while Eden and Tsoof were in primary school, I had never been close enough to the way schools operated and just assumed…

Inspired by my newly-found power, I immediately started to lobby for a new dress code for the school, something more up-to-date the kids will like to wear. This is when I learned about the many ways in which some people defend their views and how irrational they can be.

Read Raising Hope … in Uniform? »

Published: March 16, 2011 by Gal Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Education / Learning, Kids / Children Tags: beliefs, change, motivation, society, k-12 education, communication, kids / children, focus, acceptance / judgment / tolerance, school, behavior / discipline, emotional intelligence, creative / creativity, practical parenting / parents, choice

How Workplace Bullying Bystanders Can Break the Cycle

In the previous chapters, I wrote about how helping the victim at work is a good way to stop bullying in society in general by breaking the cycle of victims becoming bullies who bully other victims and make them bully others too in a futile attempt to regain lost power. The cycle must stop somewhere and this can only be done by courageous people who understand that by helping each of the participants in the game, we can reverse the cycle towards a considerate, supportive, understanding and caring society (can I get an “Amen”?).

In this chapter, I want to offer some tips to help the bystander of workplace bullying. Just to refresh, workplace bullying bystanders are the people who watch others bully and take a stand by participating, encouraging the bully actively or with body language, doing nothing or defending the bullied victim.

As you probably understand, most of the people in our society are bystanders (thank God!) and by watching or being aware, they become either bullies or victims (fearing to defend) themselves. Their help in changing the bullying phenomenon is crucial, because not being directly targeted, they have more power than the victim or the bully and are in a better position to make a difference.

Here is a list of suggestions and tips for workplace bullying bystanders. Sometimes, using a single tip can make a difference in someone’s life. Never underestimate how much power you have to make a difference!

Read How Workplace Bullying Bystanders Can Break the Cycle »

Published: March 14, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Success / Wealth, Personal Development Tags: beliefs, behavior / discipline, violence, practical parenting / parents, relationships / marriage, assertive, society, aggressive, communication, bullying, emotional intelligence, body language, how to, attitude, safety

How to Stop Workplace Bullying (2)

Stopping the bullying at work has a very important impact on the bullying in our society. Many bullies come from bullying homes or are subject to some form of bullying at work and try to regain power by picking on the people around them. It is a cycle we can break by helping each participant in the “game” break their powerless perception.

In the previous chapter of the bullying series, I wrote 30 tips to help the bullying victim at work. Here are the next tips and I am sure that implementing each of them can make a huge difference in your life.

Remember, if you are a bullying victim, you have the power to break the cycle.

Read How to Stop Workplace Bullying (2) »

Published: March 7, 2011 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: December 25, 2019In: Parenting, Personal Development Tags: bullying, communication, body language, emotional intelligence, attitude, how to, safety, behavior / discipline, beliefs, practical parenting / parents, violence, relationships / marriage, assertive, society, aggressive

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