Many parents might be unfamiliar with the word "simp," but chances are your tween or teen has used or at least heard the term. Simp is slang for a person (typically a man) who is desperate for the attention and affection of someone else (typically a woman).
www.cnn.com
lol
“Telling the bully, 'That's right,' while holding your head up high and walking away can help, as bullies usually give up if they don't succeed in tearing the other person down," he said. "And you can tell yourself that being bullied is simply the price a revolutionary has to pay for standing up for what's right.”
When I was in elementary school a kid took my red crayon and grinded it down on purpose, like colored an entire sheet of paper red for the sky instead of blue. I was like the *ing weirdo and his red sky have done it now and punched him in the stomach as soon as my little mind figured out what this dumb * had just done to my favorite color crayon.
one time this little Mexican gangster kid threw a ball of paper towel he had wetted in the science lab sink. Hit me right in my eye, HARD, that * hurt. I couldn’t even see out of my eye and I picked up my chair chased him around the desk and threw it at him as hard as I could when I got the line up. The little *er tried to post up to me when I just got done humiliating his scared ass in front of everybody. I just yelled in face “You better back down!” And he instantly turned bitch and shrunk away. He picked his battle.
One time this big black dude caught me throwing a bottle of milk just being a dick, I was like a freshman in high school and he was a senior. He wasn’t bullying me but he punked me in front of some people. That was a big mother *er though and I knew I was about to get out of an one sided ass whooping, I picked my battle.
I’ve also had my jaw broken before, my nose cracked, my eyebrow busted, my hairline busted open.
Kids that get bullied need to pick their battles and parents need to allow it to sort it’s self out or step in if it gets extreme. It’s good to let your boys experience the stress of conflict in groups with other boys, even if it turns a bit violent in my eyes. These parents that step in immediately are robbing these boys of learning opportunities one of the few these public schools are actually good at teaching.