So, for my first blog post, I decided to write about something that recently occurred involving my 5 year old son, Jackson, and a school mate. First, let me begin by saying I am an involved parent of a five year old boy (Jackson) and a 2 year old girl (Grace). I like to know what’s going on at school. I like to know who my children play with and I like to know that my children behave appropriately. I also like to know that when some “wrong” thing happens, I can trust that the teachers at their school will address this issue swiftly. Now, that being said, I’m not one of those parents who second-guesses everything the teachers decide, nor to do I get all bothered and flustered when someone doesn’t want to be friends with my kid. That’s life and that’s growing up. Kids have to figure these things out on their own sometimes and learn how to adapt and socialize.
But, I will confess, the incident I alluded to above, did most assuredly bother me. Not only was I bothered, I was hot and bothered. Here’s what went down (and I am relaying the following events from my son’s description, but he has never lied about anything like this before and, in fact, isn’t prone to making up stories about these types of things):
Jackson goes to school. One of his (current) close friends who is also 5 years old, I’ll call him “Jimmy”, hands him a picture. This picture is of Jackson with a circle/slash over Jackson’s face. Jimmy tells Jackson, “I’m not your friend anymore. That picture means I’m not your friend. And you have to keep that picture. You can’t throw that picture away.”
Jackson has a lot of friends that he interacts with at school, but Jimmy seemed to be close to the top of the list – at least for the last few weeks. But, surprisingly to me, this whole “I’m not your friend” thing didn’t seem to bother Jackson that much. Jackson said, “No thank you. I don’t want your picture.” And threw the picture in the trash. (Side Note: My children attend a Montessori school. The phrase “No thank you” is engrained into the children as a way of letting someone know that you don’t want/like what they are doing. It’s a politeness thing.)
Now, if this had been the end of the incident, I would’ve forgotten about it and moved on. Like I said before, kids are kids and this kind of thing happens all the time. You don’t want to be my friend? Fine, I’ll play with someone else today. It’s what happened next that caught me off guard and put my mother-bear senses on high alert.
Jimmy saw Jackson throw the picture away. His response to Jack’s disregard was the bold and very clear statement, “You threw the picture way, now I’m going to punch Gracie in the face.” Let me rephrase that a little differently for you. This 5 year old male child threatened to “PUNCH” a 2 year old female child “IN THE FACE”. A child that had nothing to do with anything that was going on at the time. Now, let me continue by telling you that Jimmy and Grace are not in the same class, they do not interact together, and the only time they've really been around each other was when Jimmy and his father met me and my family at the park one time.
So, why would Jimmy make the threat to Jackson’s little sister and not to Jackson directly? I mean, to me, it seems more logical and reasonable for a child of that age to directly threaten the other child standing right there in front of him. It worries me that this child can have the brain capacity to realize that by hurting someone that Jackson loves, he may hurt Jackson even more. Then I think to myself, I’ve got to be over-analyzing this, right? I mean a 5 year old can’t be that cruel and devious, can he?
It really began to upset me. This can’t be “normal” behavior. Is there something really wrong with him? Is he emotionally damaged some how? Will he act out in other ways when he gets older? Then, more selfishly, I sure hope he won’t be going to the same elementary school as Jackson.
Of course, both my husband and I spoke with the teacher and with the school director who both assured us that they would talk to Jimmy right away. I followed up with the teacher wanting to know how the situation was handled. They were very tight-lipped about what was specifically said and how the child responded. Okay, I can accept that. But they never mentioned if they spoke with Jimmy’s parents. God, I hope and pray they spoke with Jimmy’s parents. I mean, this behavior is kind of scary, right?
My suspicions were slightly confirmed when the teacher did agree with me that Jimmy’s statement about punching Grace was disturbing. “Disturbing.” This is exactly right. I was and still am disturbed by this. The teacher spoke to Jimmy and explained to him that if he continued to treat his friends this way, people would not want to be friends with him. (This information gave me pause and got me wondering if similar “incidents” had previously occurred.) I know that Jimmy once brought a pocket knife to school, but he didn’t threaten anyone with it. He played buried treasure with my son and they were pirates. But, of course, we made sure we let the school know about the pocket knife (they had found it before we mentioned it).
The school wants Jimmy to make amends with Jackson by apologizing to him. They are waiting for him to do it on his own, but may push the situation. Now, I don’t agree with forced apologies because we all know they’re not sincere. But, as adults, we often find ourselves doing this with children if only to get them to at least talk to each other. If Jimmy doesn’t apologize, it won’t bother me because maybe that will mean that Jimmy and Jackson won’t be friends. And if Jackson chooses to never play with Jimmy again, that won’t bother me one bit either.
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Yea....disturbing is right. Really really disturbing.
ReplyDeleteyup, my mama bear would have been all up in someone's face!
ReplyDeleteI wonder what kind of childhood helps shape a child's attitudes and actions into ones like these. As you wrote, kids can be violent, inconsiderate, rude, fickle, and brutally honest. But you are right, all of the actions combined point to something potentially more significant. I understand why the school would be tight-lipped (though I think you are within your rights to confirm that the school talked to the parents), but I would expect there would be more intervention than a "good talking to."
ReplyDeleteUgh.