โInitially, I wanted to run away,โ he says. โI was scared.โ Instead, he tapped his bullyโs shoulder and said: โHello. Itโs me, James Vivian.โ
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The bully recognised him and took Vivian aside. โHe said, โIโm so happy to see you. I think about you all the time, and how horrible I was to you. Iโm really sorryโ.โ
He even offered a reason โ now very ironic โ as to why the gang of boys picked on him so much.
โHe said they did it because all the girls liked me and wanted to date me,โ Vivian says. โHe said they were all really jealous. It was frustrating because Iโm gay!โ he says. Nevertheless, James was grateful for the explanation and apology.
โIt doesnโt make those sad moments any better. But it was validating.โ
Ehab Youssef, a clinical psychologist, says that while an apology can aid the healing process, itโs not a guaranteed remedy.
โSome find such apologies validating, feeling a sense of closure when their pain is acknowledged. It can help them move forward, releasing lingering hurt and resentment,โ he says.
โOthers may find this stirs up old wounds. An apology can be a meaningful step, but itโs often just one part of a broader recovery and healing process.โ
When a bully wants to apologise
Some former bullies are so tormented by their past behaviour, they feel a burning urge to atone. One such person was Woody Cooper, who features in one of Americaโs most infamous photographs of racial abuse.
The target was Dorothy Counts-Scoggins who, in 1957, was one of the first black students to attend a newly desegregated school in Charlotte, North Carolina. Young white students taunted her, threw rocks, spat and hurled racist slurs. Cooper was a culprit, caught on camera.
In 2006, Cooper emailed Counts-Scoggins with an apology. When the two met up, she said, โI forgave you long ago โ this is an opportunity to do something for our children and grandchildren.โ They shared their story many times.
Fifteen-year-old Dorothy Counts-Scoggins walks to school atย Harry Harding High Schoolย inย Charlotte, North Carolina,ย on September 4, 1957.Credit: Douglas Martin / The Charlotte News
But apologies donโt always go as planned. Sometimes, peopleโs memories of events differ wildly.
William Brougham, 47, was written to by someone who was in a different class to him at school, apologising for their treatment of him at school.
โThe strange thing is I have no memory of him bullying me,โ says Brougham, based in Sydney.
According to Youssef, a good first step for former bullies looking to apologise is to consider whether this apology is genuinely for their victimโs benefit โ and not simply a way to alleviate their own guilt.
โI also suggest theyโre prepared for any reaction,โ he says. โThe victim might not be ready to forgive.โ
Running into a former bully doesnโt always go as you might have rehearsed in your head.Credit: iStock
A moment of confrontation
Melbourne-based Jen Willis was severely bullied in grade six. โI was punched often, my lunch money stolen and I was even padlocked to the schoolโs front fence,โ says the 52-year-old.
Twelve years later, the girl responsible walked into the pub. After deliberating, Willis approached her and said, โOh my God. You padlocked me to the school fence.โ
โI wanted her to take some accountability and apologise,โ she says.
But the former bully did neither, instead asking Willis if sheโd received an academic scholarship theyโd both sat for. โI just laughed and walked away,โ she says. โIt seems this was what had challenged her.โ
Caught off-guard and confronted with a former bully, nobody knows how theyโll react. So what would Willis say if she could relive that moment?
โIโd say โthe damage you caused to my self-confidence was profound and lasted many yearsโ.โ These words, Willis says, would feel like a release.
While my school bullyโs victims will never know such release, when I broke news of his death to them, many used the same stark single word in response.
โKarma.โ
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