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Did I ever deserve being bullied at work? Is my trauma “not” trauma?

HomeForumsTough TimesDid I ever deserve being bullied at work? Is my trauma “not” trauma?

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  • This topic has 13 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 2 years ago by Anonymous.
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  • #410568
    Purple
    Participant

    Hi,

    I’m having a very hard time dealing with a sudden flashback to being witch-hunted at work 7 years ago, and it’s taking a toll over my self-esteem, which I spent so long building up from scratch all these years. I’m not understanding how to deal with all this sudden rush of intense feelings of guilt, pain and loneliness, so would appreciate some help. Please excuse me if this is all over the place, because I’m quite muddle-headed right now.

    I was around 21 years old when I became the target of a witch-hunt at my first workplace. I was a very naive, emotional, socially-awkward girl with a low self-esteem and trusted people too easily. I used to wear my emotions on my sleeve and sometimes came off as weird when put in stressful situations. In my first-ever Project at work, I became a target of a witch-hunt gradually over a period of an year, and this fuelled my terrible anxiety and depression and absolutely messed up with my sense of self. It all started because I was a non-conformist and “not a team-player”. There were also a few misunderstandings between me and my bullies in the starting, due to me being a non-conformist, and I always apologized immediately, whenever it was my mistake(though sometimes I had to apologize for no mistake of mine just to keep peace). Though we had few disagreements, never once did I cross the line to bully anyone. But, my teammates were pretty vindictive and held deep seated grudges for small misunderstandings and resorted to bullying me.

    One of my colleagues did see what was happening to me and did admit that what was happening to me was not normal and that the bullies were going too far, but she kept blaming me and told me that I was to be blamed for it. I do agree that I was not the smartest and couldn’t stand up for myself in the best way possible. But I tried my best to defend myself, though it was very sloppy and sometimes just made matters worse. I did make naive, stupid choices which sometimes worked against me, but those were the only choices I could make at that time, in intensely stressful situations based on what I felt was right at that time. Her words always made me enter into a spiral of self-doubt and made me question my own sanity and feelings. She made me feel like my feelings were wrong and that I was not supposed to feel that way.

    One of the bullying incidents was as follows – My teammates(bullies) once went through my bag and make-up products when I was away from my desk. When I went back to the desk, they started mocking me for using make-up products and said that I spent my entire salary on them(though my make-up products were very basic). They then started comparing me to her and said that she was beautiful without make-up and that I wasn’t. I tried to tell them to stop doing so in every way I could, but it all fell on deaf ears, so I had to stop talking to them completely. I vented to my other colleague(who saw what was happening) about them as I trusted her(I used some colourful language about my bullies because I was venting), but she recorded me without my knowledge and sent it to them. What’s worse was, she probed me to talk more about them by asking me leading questions trying to get me to speak out of turn so that she’s got it on record. Upon questioning, she confessed that they had asked her to record me, but she didn’t have an ounce of guilt for doing so and literally probing me to talk about them. When I called her out, her response was, “I’m on team’s side”.
    These incidents left me feeling emotionally unsafe and extremely anxious to the point that I often shivered and felt like I couldn’t trust anyone. I had to see a therapist because I was too traumatized to go back to the office after getting out of that Project. Unfortunately, I couldn’t continue my therapy due to my circumstances at that time. When I shared this with my then Manager, he invalidated me saying that what I went through was nothing traumatizing. When I told him that my therapist thought differently, he asked me what my therapist said. I told him exactly what my therapist had said to me, “You feel what you feel, your feelings are valid”. His response to that was, “Therapists always say that”. This made me again enter into a spiral of self-doubt and pain, making me question my own sanity.
    As time passed, I have healed from all this, or atleast I thought I did so, but recently, I had a sudden flashback to all of these incidents from seven years ago, and I’m struggling again. So, I would gladly appreciate some help here. Did I deserve to be bullied? Is my trauma “not” trauma?

    #410586
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    Did I deserve to be bullied?” – N O !

    Is my trauma ‘not’ trauma?“-  Your Trauma is Trauma !

    One of the bullying incidents was as follows – My teammates (bullies) once went through my bag and make-up products when I was away from my desk. When I went back to the desk, they started mocking me… I vented to my other colleague (who saw what was happening) about them as I trusted her (I used some colourful language about my bullies because I was venting), but she recorded me without my knowledge and sent it to them… When I called her out, her response was, ‘I’m on team’s side’“-

    – the bullies going through your bag- your private property- without your permission was Wrong#1. Mocking you was Wrong#2, and tricking you into venting so to record you- again, without your permission-  was Wrong#3.

    You were bullied by your work colleagues, reads to me, because you were somewhat different from the rest, or different from the dominant few of them. Unfortunately, people- and some species of animals as well- bully individuals who are different.

    You wrote: “There were also a few misunderstandings between me and my bullies in the starting, due to me being a non-conformist“- I don’t understand and I am curious about what you mean by “non-conformist” in the context of your employment of 7 years ago. Can you explain it to me?

    anita

     

    #410683
    Purple
    Participant

    Hello Anita,

    Thanks a lot for your input. I am having even more painful memories rushing back to me, so please excuse me if this is all over the place. I was a non-conformist in the sense that I didn’t conform to the existing cultural standards of my country(I’m from a conservative country) and the established status-quo of being a “team-player” in the company. Being a “team-player” in my company meant – apologizing to the whole team even for things which were not completely my fault just to satisify everyone’s ego, taking sides and recording people if asked to. I had no idea about this “team” culture as it was my first job, and the whole thing didn’t make any sense morally to me. I was pressured to apologize and take the blame for things which weren’t completely my fault. The biggest problem was, though I apologized several times to them, they still held deep-seated grudges and emotionally abused me every chance they got. They expected sincerity from me, and though I was as sincere towards them as possible, they never once treated me with basic respect or sincerity. They first made me trust them but back-stabbed me time and again. When I called them out on their behaviour, they didn’t like it. One of the bullies, before leaving the team confessed that she deliberately hurt me because she felt that my initial apology towards the team was “insincere”. All this hurt me deeply and pushed me into a spiral of depression and eradicated my self-esteem slowly.

    I was also forced to share my personal details like info about my family and my then boyfriend, and constantly forced to share my opinions on controversial topics, which made me feel extremely uncomfortable. When I tried to set boundaries and refused to speak about a certain controversial topic or share my personal info, they used to get extremely offended and even start mocking me for wanting to keep my personal info private. This behaviour of theirs forced me to always just give up in the end and share my personal info or my opinions on controversial topics with them, in the hopes that they might stop harassing me, but their harassment just got worse. Whenever I shared my personal info upon being asked, they used to probe even deeper into it, forcing me to give even more info and then make comments about my personal life. Whenever I shared my opinions on being forced to do so(which were different than theirs because they always supported the status quo and I was most of the times against it), they often used to give glances towards each other in a way ridiculing me, or downright make mean, hurtful comments and try to tear down my values and opinions. They were also pretty hypocritic with the way they held me to unreasonable standards and nitpick on everything I said or did, but patted each others’ back when they made the same mistakes I made. For ex: They didn’t like the way I spoke to my family or friends(yes they used to over-hear my phone conversations with them and I normally spoke bluntly with my family or friends), but used to be very lenient towards someone else from their group who used curse words at their parents.

    I was growing exhausted by all this and started standing up for myself, and when I reached my limits, I lashed back too. Their constant mocking of me made me misunderstand some of their words and actions towards me too, and one time I lashed back with small insults towards them because their mocking was getting unbearable and I partly misunderstood some of their words. They didn’t like it and my lashing back was seen as “disrespectful”. I immedaitely apologized that I was wrong for lashing out and that the misunderstanding was on my side(though it was on both the sides), but they were unwilling to hear me out and made me out to be the bad guy. I felt like my perspective would never be heard and doesn’t matter, but still, I apologized several times.

    One of the bullies(more like an enabler who emotionally abused me by being in the sidelines) had the “good guy” image and he was very convinced and confident that I was the one in the wrong and refused to listen to anything I said. When I asked him why they treated me this way, his response was, “If we treat everyone well and not you, then you must be in the wrong”, implying that I was in the wrong and deserved to be bullied. Though, in a later incident, when I’ve had enough, with them name-calling me as “retarded” and called him out, he did kind of apologize, but still refused to acknowledge that I was being bullied and believed that I “made” them act that way.

    All this made me enter into this never ending guilt-trap of constantly feeling that I did something wrong and always wondering what I did wrong. I lost my self-esteem, was burdened with intense guilt, always walked on egg shells around them and felt that I deserved to be treated the way they treated me because they made me convinced that I was in the wrong. Because I was all alone throughout the whole situation, and it was a one against a group situation, I also have this fear that if something ever happens in the future, my perspective will never be heard by anyone and no one would be on my side. So, please tell me, was I not bullied? Did I deserve to be treated this way even if I made some unintentional mistakes but immediately apologized for them? Do I deserve to live constantly feeling guilty and not knowing why? Don’t I deserve to lead a happy and confident life?

    #410705
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    You are welcome! The company you worked for reads like a company from hell.

    Being a ‘team-player’ in my company meant“- it meant having one’s soul sucked out by abuse, didn’t it?

    I was also forced to share my personal details like info about my family and my then boyfriend“- a workplace does not own any rights for such personal information!

    I was growing exhausted by all this… when I reached my limits, I lashed back… with small insults towards them…Did I deserve to be treated this way even if I made some unintentional mistakes but immediately apologized for them?“- you were a victim in the context of this company. There is an unrealistic expectations that people have- when looking back at times when they were victimized- that they should have been Perfect Victims: zero aggressive behaviors on their part. This is an unrealistic expectation because hurt people automatically and instinctively react, sooner or later, with some form of aggression (minimally by raising the volume of one’s voice and tensing the facial muscles, appearing threatening). It is not human- nor is it humane- to take ongoing abuse quietly, nicely.. and forevermore.

    One of the bullies… his response was, ‘If we treat everyone well and not you, then you must be in the wrong’“- what he said was wrong. I am guessing that he knew that what he said was wrong, but he said it anyway because it was convenient for him to say it.

    All this made me enter into this never ending guilt-trap of constantly feeling that I did something wrong and always wondering what I did wrong. I lost my self-esteem, was burdened with intense guilt, always walked on egg shells around them.. it was a one against a group situation“-

    two row times/group bullying in the workplace cause significant long-term health impacts: “In its worst forms, group bullying — also known as ‘mobbing’, can have devastating long-term health impacts on targeted victims and organizations. What is mobbing? Mobbing is very aggressive form of bullying — where a targeted individual will be bullied by a group of people. Often times the group will have a mobbing ringleader who is the primary aggressor of the bullying mission… People who have been targeted by mobbing have described it as a campaign of terrorism, or toxic work environment where they feel ganged up on… Mobbing tactics can vary but they include a long list of behaviours: dehumanize a person to embarrass, diminish, humiliate, mischaracterize, and intimidate the targeted person. Verbal aggression includes the way a person is spoken to with an aggressive or dismissive tone, subject to insults or sarcastic comments…  Gossip and slander can occur where ringleaders are initiating malicious rumours or untrue stories… Mobbing has one goal: to remove the targeted person from expressing an opinion or talent outside of what the mob ringleaders will allow… Mob ringleaders will dominate the work environment either by silencing diversity or pushing targeted individuals out of the organization because of maltreatment..”.

    I also have this fear that if something ever happens in the future, my perspective will never be heard by anyone and no one would be on my side“- when considering future employment in any company, check if they have an established policy in regard to workplace bullying.

    So, please tell me, was I not bullied? .. Do I deserve to live constantly feeling guilty and not knowing why? Don’t I deserve to lead a happy and confident life?“- you were bullied, you do not deserve to feel guilty, and you deserve as happy and as confident a life as you can have!

    In the resource I quoted from, it says that PTSD is one of the long-term impacts resulting from workplace mobbing. In your very first sentence, in your original post, you mentioned flashbacks in regard to the workplace bullying (“I’m having a very hard time dealing with a sudden flashback“). Did you seek professional help on the matter?

    anita

    #410883
    Purple
    Participant

    Hello Anita,
    Sorry for the delayed response. Thank you so much again for your input and validation! Yes, I did see a therapist back then, but unfortunately, I couldn’t attend more than a couple of sessions due to my then circumstances. Those sessions did help a bit, and all the while I thought that I’ve healed, but I don’t know why, these memories have sudenly resurfaced after years now.
    Regarding that company, it’s a well-established one, but the same rules of “team-culture” applied throughout all it’s branches. Though a few anti-bullying Laws existed, not everybody followed them well. What you shared regarding mobbing was exactly what I felt – it felt as a campaign of terrorism against me, for my unintentional mistakes or their percieved “mistakes”of mine, despite my constant apologies towards them everytime.
    I hope I’m not bothering you too much and that it’s okay to share some more painful memories which I’m struggling with. Back then, I struggled with low-self esteem and had insecurities regarding my looks, and my colleagues deliberately picked on my insecurities repeatedly to hurt me more. They used to ask my other office friends(outside of my Project) about why they were even friends with “someone like me”, implying that I didn’t deserve to have any friends. Also, when I refused to share any personal info about my then boyfriend, they interrogated me like a criminal and made sarcastic, hurtful comments saying that I was “lying” about having a boyfriend. These interrogation sessions were traumatic and dehumanizing to say the least. This forced me to reveal all info about him. They went through his Facebook profile trying to find clues of our relationship and kept up with their “You are lying” taunts when they didn’t find any traces of it. When it was finally revealed that he was indeed my boyfriend, one of them, made a comment, “Your boyfriend really loves you”- which, to me then seemed sarcastic, and I percieved it as, “Your boyfriend must really like you to love someone like you”. We kept going back-and-forth and I finally lashed out at one of them, say X, saying, “My bf looks better than X”. X got angry, and I stated the reason why I said what I said. They said that they didn’t mean it in a negative way and they actually meant what they said. I immediately apologized sincerely to them for misunderstanding them and explained them that I didn’t really mean what I said, and that I was just emotionally hurt by their behaviour and lashed out. They refused to accept my apologies at first, and after apologizing a couple of times more, everybody else accepted, except for X. I felt unheard and hurt that they felt entitled to think about me the way they wanted and treated me less than human, but a single event of misunderstanding on my part was treated as a crime even after sincere apologies from my side.
    Things started getting even worse after this incident. Though they said that they accepted my apologies, they still bullied me by making aggressive and sarcastic comments about my character and looks at every chance they got. All this intensified into other bullying events which I explained in above posts.
    During my last days in that Project, I tried one last time to have a conversation with X to get some closure. I shared that I had insecurities and that their repeated verbal attacks on my insecurites has traumatized me. To which X replied, “I too have insecurities, you were mean to me too” referring to the one time I lashed out at him. I apologized again to him, but he said that I deserved all the bullying.
    Now, I completely agree that I was in the wrong to have made a mean comment about him, but I feel that he was being very unfair in equating the magnitude of effects of a one-time occurence(to which apologies were already issued multiple times), to the magnitude of effects of repetitive harassment, and saying that I deserved it. Could you please your thoughts about this?

    #410894
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    You are welcome and no, you are not bothering me at all. You are welcome to share about your painful experiences as much as you want to share.

    Could you please (offer) your thoughts about this?“- yes:

    I struggled with low-self-esteem and had insecurities regarding my looks“- I did too. I wonder where your personal low self-esteem and insecurities originated. Maybe if we talked some about that, what happened at the workplace 7 years ago will hurt a bit less, or it may not resurface again.

    and my colleagues deliberately picked on my insecurities repeatedly to hurt me more“- this is the.. job description of a bully: to attack where it hurts.

    they interrogated me like a criminal… These interrogation sessions were traumatic and dehumanizing to say the least. This forced me to reveal all info about him“- as you revealed more and more info about your then boyfriend, your interrogating bullies experienced more and more success, and were encouraged to achieve even more success. It’s like a mountain lion chasing a deer. The deer slows down=> the mountain lion is encouraged and increases its pace, running even faster toward the deer.

    I finally lashed out at one of them, say X… I immediately apologized sincerely to them… after apologizing a couple of times more.. Though they said that they accepted my apologies, they still bullied me“- the male deer turns around and pokes (lashing out at) the mountain lion with its antlers. At this point, the lion, hurt and scared of getting more hurt, may turn around and away from the deer.. but alas, the deer apologizes repeatedly, so the lion thinks: deer is sorry, deer will not poke me again, so better complete the chase and feast on this deer.

    During my last days in that Project, I tried one last time to have a conversation with X to get some closure. I shared that I had insecurities and that their repeated verbal attacks on my insecurities has traumatized me. To which X replied, ‘I too have insecurities, you were mean to me too’, referring to the one time I lashed out at him. I apologized again to him, but he said that I deserved all the bullying“- the deer, wounded from multiple attacks, but alive, and soon to be safe, tries to get some closure with the mountain lion, so it approaches the lion for an honest conversation, telling the lion: it traumatized me when you inflicted these wounds on me, to which the lion replies: you poked me that one time and it hurt! The deer then apologizes for that one time, and the lion attacks the deer yet again…  because that’s what lions do.

    Now, I completely agree that I was in the wrong to have made a mean comment about him, but I feel that he was being very unfair in equating the magnitude of effects of a one-time occurrence (to which apologies were already issued multiple times), to the magnitude of effects of repetitive harassment, and saying that I deserved it“- yes, it was unfair of him, of course it was unfair, but you can’t reason with a bully because a bully (be it a primary bully or a secondary bully, like X) doesn’t care about fairness and honesty. To acknowledge your mistakes and wrongdoings in the context of interacting with people who are interested in honesty and betterment is the right thing to do. It is the wrong thing to do (wrong to you) when interacting with bullies.

    anita

     

    #411142
    Anonymous
    Guest

    How are you, Purple?

    anita

    #411287
    Purple
    Participant

    Hello Anita,

    I’m very sorry for the delayed response. I had been having quite a few flashbacks to the incidents which happened back then and was too disoriented to reply back. My low self-esteem and insecurities existed since my childhood, due to being bullied and made an outcast at a young age at school (I’m completely over these incidents btw). But, these issues became severe and new issues were created, when I was subjected to workplace-bullying. Until before joining my job, though I had my insecurities and low self-esteem, I was pretty confident in that I was a decent human being and I never had any doubts about my character and values. But, the bullies made me question my own sanity and my own character. One question which was always in my head – “Am I the bad person here?”.
    I think the reason these incidents from 7 years ago are resurfacing again, is because I never got any proper closure. Everybody was pointing fingers at me, so I never had anyone who listened to or understood my side of the story. Also the confidence displayed by my bullies, about being justified in hurting me, about being so sure and convinced that I was the bad person and deserved it, was what made me question my own reality and become smaller in front of them, to the point that I slowly started disappearing even in my own conscious. My perspective disappeared and their perspective took over my conscious. They had a statement which they repeated often, almost like a signature after bullying me, “Does it hurt? That’s how I felt back then”. That confident gaze of theirs, the tone in which they spoke, everything stuck inside my head and my critical brain played it in an unending loop, and now, that’s happening again.
    There was another bully Y, who was set out to demonify me in front of everyone I was close to, or getting close to. He wanted to prove to everyone that I was “That kind of person”, though I still don’t know what “kind of person” he wanted to prove me as. He manipulated and created situations where I felt cornered and pressurized to reveal my intentions about people and things. I remember one incident when he demonized me in front of others. There was a colleague(who was not a part of my team) who became my acquaintance through some small talk about breakups( at this point I had broken up with my then bf). She offered me to tag along with her and her friends to speak and vent about our exes, for which I was reluctant to go initially, but my Manager convinced me to go and become more “social”. Bully Y saw that and wanted to prove to her about my “true nature” so he came up with a scheme. I had a good talk with her and her friends and later in the day, all the bullies started questioning me about what we talked about our bfs. I told them that it was just a usual talk where everyone shared their sad experiences. They asked me what I talked about and I said that I didn’t talk much about myself, as the other ladies had much more serious and painful issues with their bfs. The bullies then started twisting my words trying to frame me as someone who felt superior to other ladies because I didn’t have serious problems with my ex-bf(which was entirely the opposite of what I felt about the other ladies btw).
    I sensed something wrong and pinged my other female teammate A(the one who recorded me) and asked her if the others are plotting something, and if I needed to be careful about what to say, to which she said no. Though she was also in it together with them, which she later confessed about. I started feeling cornered and anxious again and started loosing my cool and rationality. Now this is where they start manipulating the whole situation and matters start getting worse. They start pressuring me to talk about the other ladies’ stories, and I start feeling that chill down my spine thinking, “It has started again.. they are ganging up on me again.. they are upto something.. I feel cornered and am loosing my rationality.. I am all alone in this again”. I first refuse to talk about any of them and say, “If you are so curious about them, go ask them yourself”. The mini-bullies back-off and I feel relieved for a second. But, the main bully now stands up signalling to someone(I later realize that this person was the lady who invited me to have a chat with her and her friends) and says, “Why are you being so stubborn? It’s not like they can hear us”. Now, I didn’t know that the Lady was sitting right next to my cubicle, and the main bully’s pressure got the best out of me. I shared snippets of their stories with the bullies. I know I was in the wrong for sharing their stories, and I should’ve stood my ground, but I was manipulated and pressured by my bullies into sharing with them. At this point, someone else from my team(I think it was my manager, my memory is not clear about this) asks me what I feel about my ex after listening to their stories and I say, “I now think that my ex was an angel”. I didn’t say this with any negative intention towards the other ladies, I just shared what I felt about my ex, and that too upon being questioned. That Lady has been listening to the whole conversation all the while, and is now angered by my statement about my ex(understandable from her perspective). The main bully gleefully gets up and says, “So your alliance has fallen apart so fast?”. From this point, I became the bad one who felt “superior” to others and gossiped about other colleagues, and my bullies became the “good guys” who revealed about my “true-nature” to others.
    I apologize to that Lady immediately and try to explain her that it was never my intention to feel superior to her or to offend her, and she refuses to take my apology. The next day, I take her aside and explain the whole situation about how bully Y plotted all this due some grudges against me and apologize to her again, and this time, she does accept it. Later she goes to bully Y and tells him everything which I told her earlier. Turns out she was also in cahoots with him from the starting. She and the other bullies then come to me and throw their signature dialogue, “Does it hurt?”, smiling gleefully at my tears.
    Bully X also played a huge part in eroding my self-esteem as most of the times he was the one who always said, “Does it hurt? That’s how I felt back then”, with a confident, justified gaze and tone. They all loved using false-equivalnces in order to justify their actions towards me, and I was left all confused, hurt and blaming myself for every incident. Bully X’s image of being “the guy who is always right” added to my confusion. If he’s right, then I must be wrong, isn’t it? Also, Whenever they made me out to be the bad guy, I tried defending myself saying, “I am not that kind of person”. To which they always replied, “So are you saying that “I” am that kind of person?”, with the same confidence in their gaze and tone. I now think that they were projecting onto me because they didn’t like admitting that they were the ones in the wrong here.

    #411288
    Purple
    Participant

    Also, thanks a lot for the deer and lion analogy, it helped me understand a lot of things better!

    #411301
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    The bullies made me question my own sanity and my own character. One question which was always in my head – ‘Am I the bad person here?’… Everybody was pointing fingers at me… Also the confidence displayed by my bullies, about being justified in hurting me, about being so sure and convinced that I was the bad person and deserved it, was what made me question my own reality and become smaller in front of them, to the point that I slowly started disappearing even in my own conscious. My perspective disappeared and their perspective took over my conscious“-

    – you explained bullying so well here: only a true victim of real-life bullying/mobbing can explain it so well. EVERYBODY pointed the finger at you, pointing at you as the bad person.. and because they did this every day for long enough.. you believed them. When you believe that you are a bad person, you want to.. get rid of that bad person (yourself) by making yourself as small as possible- in your own mind. This is what happened to me as a result of being bullied by my mother: my perspective almost disappeared and the perspective that she confidently and angrily presented to me- took hold.

    All the bullies started questioning me…. They start pressuring me to talk about the other ladies’ stories… At this point, someone else from my team… asks me what I feel about my ex after listening to their stories… That Lady has been listening to the whole conversation all the while, and is now angered by my statement about my ex… “- all these work colleagues… did any of them do the job they were hired to do at the workplace? It reads like they had a whole lot of spare time for meticulous, time-consuming bullying…

    “Whenever they made me out to be the bad guy, I tried defending myself saying, ‘I am not that kind of person’. To which they always replied, ‘So are you saying that ‘I’ am that kind of person?‘, with the same confidence in their gaze and tone. I now think that they were projecting onto me because they didn’t like admitting that they were the ones in the wrong here”-

    – the response I boldfaced is one of the logical fallacies/mind games/ crazy-making tactics that people use to not address the substance of an attempted conversation (which was the real-life situation where a coworker blamed Purple of being “that kind of person”), and shift the focus to an imaginary, made-up situation where Purple blamed the coworker for being “that kind of person”. I am sorry that you went through such mental torture at the time and that currently, you are suffering from flashbacks.

    anita

    #411302
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Just read your most recent post: you are welcome, Purple!

     

    #411869
    Purple
    Participant

    Hello Anita,

    Very sorry for the delayed response. Last week was again pretty painful with a bunch more of memories rushing back to me. And this time I think I’ve got a hunch of their motive for inflicting pain on me. I think that they hated me for calling them out for their wrong-doings towards me and hated me for my values and convinced themselves that I was a self-righteous, judgemental person who deserved to be bullied.

    “my perspective almost disappeared and the perspective that she confidently and angrily presented to me- took hold.” – I’m happy to finally find someone who understands what I felt exactly. The anger they displayed with extreme confidence, without an ounce of guilt on their face, was what made me question the reality and end-up in a spiral of self-doubt. Because, normally(or atleast in my case), the one who has done wrong to someone else, would be humble and show some signs of guilt; confidently expressed anger is an emotion expressed by the one who was hurt, not the one who inflicted the hurt.

    I’m very sorry that you were bullied by your mother(someone who was supposed to protect you). Hope you are healed now and in a better place. I have an emotionally abusive parent who failed me too, and he played a role in one of my workplace-bullying incidents. One night, as we were leaving the office, my teammates were bullying me as usual, but this time in front of my manager. After a while, I couldn’t take it anymore and left their side. They later started badmouthing me to our manager, thinking that I’d already left. They didn’t know that I was nearby listening to them. Each and every word of theirs’ against me pierced sharply through my heart and I felt extremely hurt. They kept badmouthing me for a while and I kept controlling myself from crying, but soon enough, my Dad came to pick me up and called out my name(my Dad’s workplace was nearby and he used to pick me up after work). The moment I saw his face, I burst out in tears and my teammates saw me. I cried for a while sitting beside him and then Bully B(my then Team Lead who also played a huge role in bullying me, who later left the company after a few months), came to me to apologize to me(on being forced by my manager). I was too hurt to even look at her, and told my Dad to send her away as I didn’t want to talk to her at that moment. But my Dad tried forcing me to accept her apology, and I insisted on not wanting to talk to her. I then told him that I wanted to leave, but he kept insisting that we stay for a while more and could leave only if I told him what happened(still wonder why he was so adamant on not leaving). I gave up on leaving(my first mistake) and explained him the whole situation while crying in between. After a while, I saw him exchanging glances with bully Y. At this point, I was super pissed that my Dad was in cahoots with them. I felt betrayed by him and angrily walked away towards our vehicle, and waited for him to come. My Dad then started speaking to my teammates(I couldn’t hear what they were talking because I was standing far away). After a while, Bully B came to me and said with a smirk, “Your Dad is also on our side”, and walked away. I felt extremely hurt and betrayed, that MY Dad, who was supposed to protect me and take my side no matter what, sided with my bullies. This was the first betrayal I ever experienced from my Dad and felt heart-broken(there were many more later and I finally realized that my Dad is emotionally abusive). Wanting to have a serious talk with my Dad, and knowing that he wouldn’t take my feelings seriously, I kept the keys of our vehicle with me. My Dad then came back to the vehicle and the rest of my teammates stood stealthily behind me, which my Dad already saw, but didn’t tell me. I tried to initiate a conversation with him and asked him, “You are MY Dad, you are supposed to be on my side. Are you on my side or their side?”. To which he didn’t answer, as I already expected, and started trying to evade the conversation, invalidating my feelings. I then said that the vehicle keys were with me and that I’d not give them back to him until he answered me. He again started mocking me and demanded for the keys, trying to evade the conversation. This time, my teammates who were hiding behind me, listening to everything, also joined in on laughing at me. Bully Y had this smirk on his face which indicated that he was looking down on me. They walked away, and I was left in extreme emotional pain and disbelief. I then threw away the keys I was holding in my hand, out of intense emotional pain and anger, that my Dad had betrayed me, and walked away and got on a cab. I then started getting calls from my Dad, which I ignored. Immediately after, Bully B called me and started lecturing me on how “wrong” and “disrespectful” I was, for throwing away the keys and walking away on my own. She then told me how my Dad was planning on calling the police because he was worried for my “safety”. I was scared that the matter would get out of hands if my Dad involved the police, so I answered the next call from him, asked him to apologize to me and got off the cab to go with him. I asked him about what he said about me to my teammates, and he replied that he didn’t say anything(a lie which was confirmed the next day), which I believed naively.

    The next day, Bully B decided to record me secretly about what happened after I left the previous day and started interrogating me for the details. She wanted to use this recording as a cop out in front of my manager, for what they all did to me the previous night. They wanted to justify their actions by making me look as the bad guy for throwing away my Dad’s keys and walking away on my own. That isolated incident would “prove” that I’m “that kind of person”. I immediately saw that she was trying to record and I decided to fish for the truth too. I don’t remember the whole conversation properly, but this is how it went(her tone was quite condensing and judgemental throughout the conversation) –

    Me: What did my Dad say?
    Her(unwillingly shared): He said that you are a “difficult” child at home too and that they too have a hard time dealing with you. He said that your mother is “vexed” with you.(she also told other things he said about me, but I dont remember much details).

    (I was utterly shocked and felt betrayed that my Dad actually said all these false things about me to my CO-WORKERS and MANAGER, and then lied to me that he didn’t say anything!)

    Her: See, I was right about you. Whatever I said yesterday about you is all true, your own Dad had justified that. I was not wrong in saying those things about you.
    Me: Then why did you apologize? You apologized to me, that means you feel guilty for what you said.
    Her: I apologized only because I felt “pity” towards you, because you were crying. Our Manager asked me to do so.(I couldn’t believe that she was thinking that she was somehow superior to me and that her “apology” was an act of “charity” towards me)
    Me: You did it because you felt guilty. If not you wouldn’t have come to me later saying,” Your Dad is also on our side”.(This is how I think even now, I think my Dad’s words about me made her feel justified for treating me that way, and she dusted off her guilt. I request your thoughts on this, Anita)

    Me: What happened after I left in the cab?

    (Turns out that my Dad played the victim in front of them and seeked help from them to find the keys, though I threw them right beside the vehicle; thereby making me out to be the bad guy)

    Her : Colleague X helped your Dad to find the keys. Your Dad was very “worried” about you when you left without saying. You were also very wrong for throwing away your Dad’s keys. You are “disrespectful”, “ill-mannered” and “difficult”. You shouldn’t treat elders that way. Colleague Y is “disgusted” by your behaviour.
    Me(very triggered by now about Bully Y’s opinion of me) : Who is he to judge me without knowing anything about my relationship with my Dad? He should look at himself before pointing fingers at me. I clearly remember the smirk he gave when I was crying. I’ll never forget that!

    At this point, I was very triggered by the fact that they were taking things out of context and looking at my reaction towards my Dad as an isolated event, rather than as my reaction towards his betrayal. I was angered by the fact that Bully Y felt entitled to judge me and look down on me without seeing the whole truth and solely based on HIS idea of what was right manners and what was wrong manners. I felt extremely hurt that they were twisting the whole incident in a way which portrayed me as the “bad guy” and the rest of them as the “good ones”, when in reality “I” was the victim. I also felt that my perspective was unheard and suppressed. No one wanted to understand how strong the feelings of betrayal were for a daughter, who was back-stabbed by her own Dad. I was again labelled “that kind of girl” by Bully Y. Interestingly, another Bully C, often threw profanities at his mother, but Bully Y was never “disgusted” by his behaviour, neither did he look down upon him. I still never understood these double-standards.

    Bully B was one of the main bullies, who inflicted too much pain on me. As long as I remember, I was always depressed during the time she was still working there. Yet, according to bully X’s words, my abuse was not “as bad as” what he went through at the hands of another colleague.

    #411872
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    I read part of your recent post and I very much want to reply (and read the rest), but I am not focused currently. I will reply either in a few hours or Fri morning (in about 16 hours from now).

    anita

    #411897
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Purple:

    I’m very sorry that you were bullied by your mother (someone who was supposed to protect you)..“- thank you, Purple.

    MY Dad, who was supposed to protect me and take my side no matter what, sided with my bullies“- I am equally sorry that someone who was supposed to protect you… attacked you instead.

    “One night, as we were leaving the office, my teammates were bullying me as usual… badmouthing me…  soon enough, my Dad came to pick me up.. I burst out in tears…  then Bully B..  came to me to apologize to me.. I was too hurt to even look at her, and told my Dad to send her away…  But my Dad tried forcing me to accept her apology…  I then told him that I wanted to leave, but he kept insisting that… I (tell) him what happened.. I.. explained (to) him the whole situation while crying… My Dad then started speaking to my teammates.. After a while, Bully B came to me and said with a smirk, ‘Your Dad is also on our side‘, and walked away… I tried to initiate a conversation with him and asked him, ‘You are MY Dad, you are supposed to be on my side. Are you on my side or their side?‘. To which he didn’t answer.. I then threw away the keys I was holding in my hand… Me: What did my Dad say? Her.. : He said that you are a ‘difficult’ child at home too.. that your mother is ‘vexed’ with you…. See, I was right about you… your own Dad had justified that. I was not wrong in saying those things about you.

    “Me: Then why did you apologize? You apologized to me, that means you feel guilty for what you said. Her: I apologized only because I felt ‘pity’ towards you, because you were crying. Our Manager asked me to do so... Me: You did it because you felt guilty… (.. I think my Dad’s words about me made her feel justified for treating me that way, and she dusted off her guilt. I request your thoughts on this, Anita)”- 

    – (1) I don’t think that she apologized to you earlier (before taking her apology back) because she felt guilty. I think that- accordance to what you shared in your thread- apologizing in the company where you worked was nothing more than an unwritten company policy: a way to lubricate interpersonal interactions in the workplace for the purpose of keeping everyone where they are, superiors in their superior positions, and subordinates in their inferior position. This policy had nothing to do with truth, guilt or innocence (or with being a team).

    Work colleagues were expected to apologize to each other, subordinates were expected to apologize to superiors for any criticism made, valid or invalid, and superiors apologized to the subordinates just so… to appear like team players. I think that you took the apologizing out of context, imagining that it had something to do with right and wrong, guilt or innocence.

    (2)  You wrote earlier and most recently: “There were also a few misunderstandings between me and my bullies in the starting, due to me being a non-conformist, and I always apologized immediately… I was a non-conformist in the sense that I didn’t conform to the existing cultural standards of my country (I’m from a conservative country).. I think that they hated me for calling them out for their wrong-doings towards me and hated me for my values and convinced themselves that I was a self-righteous, judgmental person who deserved to be bullied”- I think that although you tried to conform to the unwritten company policy and apologize repeatedly, you also stood by your values of truth, and right and wrong, and therefore, you rebelled against admitting wrong when and where you did no wrong.

    Rebels aka non-conformists are silenced- in authoritarian homes, workplaces and countries.

    Seems like you were a rebel in a similar way at home, and this is the commonality that your father had with your work colleagues: they, like him, didn’t want rebels in their midst, and so, they joined forces for the purpose of silencing you.

    “Her:…  You were also very wrong for throwing away your Dad’s keys. You are ‘disrespectful’, ‘ill-mannered’ and ‘difficult’“- it was not disrespectful or ill-mannered, for you to throw away the keys in the context in which you did; it was rebellious.

    “Me..: Who is he to judge me without knowing anything about my relationship with my Dad? He should look at himself before pointing fingers at me..”- you are asking for honest introspection from people whose only interest is to … silence a rebel.

    anita

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