Guest guest Posted November 23, 2006 Report Share Posted November 23, 2006 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/6170758.stm Last Updated: Wednesday, 22 November 2006, 14:40 GMT 'Bullied because I was different' As the government launches a drive to tackle prejudice-led bullying, Muggleton talks about how he was targeted because he was different. As someone with Asperger syndrome, acknowledges that he " tends to show up on the social radar " . He looks like any other 17-year-old but his condition makes it difficult to make eye contact or read other social cues. " The bullying started when I went into Year 2, so I must have been six or seven. " It probably doesn't sound much - I was just excluded more and more from games in the playground and when I was invited to join in it was only if I was the target, the object of fun. " It may not sound much but when it happens every day it does get to you. " By the time I got to Year 5, I was depressed. In Year 7, when I was 11 or 12, I very quickly became very depressed and was put on anti- depressants. " That's when I first became suicidal. " At primary school they didn't really do a huge amount to help. The people doing the bullying were reprimanded once which did help for a bit but it didn't stop it completely. " The main trouble was that it wasn't the accepted definition of bullying - there was no physical violence as such, no hitting or punching, but it was constant. " I think there's no doubt about it that I was picked on because I have Asperger's. " Shoved " Although I wasn't diagnosed until I was 15 I am still someone who will show up on the social radar as being different. " But the fact that I wasn't diagnosed - and therefore wasn't recognised as someone with special needs - shouldn't have made any difference to how the school reacted. " It was when I moved to secondary school that the bullying became more physical. " The school had really narrow corridors and when we moved between lessons I was forever being shoved - occasionally kicked - and always had name-calling. " I would try and seek refuge in the library and the bullies would come and deliberately annoy me. " The school didn't do anything. I would talk to people about it but nothing happened. " Breakdown " A teacher did once show me some pictures of pupils including some of those who were tormenting me and ask me to pick them out. I did but the file was just packed away. " In Year 10 I had a nervous breakdown and developed a phobia of school. " There were attempts to reintegrate me into the school system but eventually my psychiatrist decided that any more would do irreparable damage so I finally left in the January of my Year 11, just before my GCSEs. " I managed to scrape a handful of Cs and Bs in my GCSEs and there's no doubt my school experience affected my results. " When I was at school I was on the verge of a panic attack for most of the time so how could I possibly concentrate? " In the September of what would have been my Year 12, I attended the internet-based Satellite Virtual School and studied from home. " It's a great system and threw me a lifeline but it isn't the same as learning face-to-face. " Degree hope " So, after a year I did some research and found Farleigh Further Education College near Bath - about 100 miles away from my home in Guildford, Surrey. " It's a residential college providing support to " Aspies " and I'm doing my A-levels there now, with the fees paid by Surrey County Council. " Ideally I'd like to do a degree but my education has been so damaged that I'm having to review my GCSEs as well as do my A-levels and what happened at school has mentally scarred me. " I think the main trouble schools have is that they pride themselves on not having a bullying problem so they won't admit it and won't do anything about it. " I really think you need someone independent of the school that people can go to, to speak to about bullying. " Until schools acknowledge that it is a problem for them it will never be tackled. " A lot more needs to be done. Bullying really does destroy lives. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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