
Half the population are bullied by a serial bully ... most only recognize
it when they read this
Half the population are bullied ...
most people only realise it when they read this page
What is bullying, how to recognise bullying
On this page
Where are people bullied? |
What is bullying?
Recognising a bully | How does bullying
cause injury to health?
On another page
Why me?
Why have my colleagues deserted me?
Answers to frequently asked questions on bullying
Where are people bullied?
- at work by their manager or co-workers or subordinates, or by their clients (bullying,
workplace bullying, mobbing, work abuse, harassment, discrimination)
- at home by their partner or parents or siblings or children (bullying, assault, domestic
violence, abuse, verbal abuse)
- at school (bullying, harassment, assault)
- in the care of others, such as in hospital, convalescent homes, care homes, residential
homes (bullying, harassment, assault)
- in the armed forces (bullying, harassment, discrimination, assault)
- by those in authority (harassment, abuse of power)
- by neighbours and landlords (bullying, harassment)
- by strangers (harassment, stalking, assault, sexual assault, rape, grievous bodily harm, murder)
How do you know if you're being bullied? Bullying differs from harassment and assault
in that the latter can result from a single incident or small number of incidents - which
everybody recognises as harassment or assault - whereas bullying tends to be an
accumulation of many small incidents over a long period of time. Each incident tends to be
trivial, and on its own and out of context does not constitute an offence or grounds for
disciplinary or grievance action. So, ...
What is bullying?
- constant nit-picking, fault-finding and criticism of a trivial nature - the triviality,
regularity and frequency betray bullying; often there is a grain of truth (but only a
grain) in the criticism to fool you into believing the criticism has validity, which it
does not; often, the criticism is based on distortion, misrepresentation or fabrication
- simultaneous with the criticism, a constant refusal to acknowledge you and your
contributions and achievements or to recognise your existence and value
- constant attempts to undermine you and your position, status, worth, value and potential
- where you are in a group (eg at work), being singled out and treated differently; for
instance, everyone else can get away with murder but the moment you put a foot wrong -
however trivial - action is taken against you
- being isolated and separated from colleagues, excluded from what's going on,
marginalized, overruled, ignored, sidelined, frozen out, sent to Coventry
- being belittled, demeaned and patronised, especially in front of others
- being humiliated, shouted at and threatened, often in front of others
- being overloaded with work, or having all your work taken away and replaced with either
menial tasks (filing, photocopying, minute taking) or with no work at all
- finding that your work - and the credit for it - is stolen and plagiarised
- having your responsibility increased but your authority taken away
- having annual leave, sickness leave, and - especially - compassionate leave refused
- being denied training necessary for you to fulfil your duties
- having unrealistic goals set, which change as you approach them
- ditto deadlines which are changed at short notice - or no notice - and without you being
informed until it's too late
- finding that everything you say and do is twisted, distorted and misrepresented
- being subjected to disciplinary procedures with verbal or written warnings imposed for
trivial or fabricated reasons and without proper investigation
- being coerced into leaving through no fault of your own, constructive dismissal, early
or ill-health retirement, etc
For further information on what bullying is, click
here. For an answer to the
question Why me?, click here.
How do I recognise a bully?
Most bullying is traceable to one person, male or female - bullying is not a gender
issue. Bullies are often clever people (especially female bullies) but you can be clever too.
Who does this describe in your life?
- Jekyll & Hyde nature - vicious and vindictive in private, but innocent and charming
in front of witnesses; no-one can (or wants to) believe this individual has a vindictive
nature - only the current target sees both sides
- is a convincing, compulsive liar and when called to account, will make up anything
spontaneously to fit their needs at that moment
- uses lots of charm and is always plausible and convincing when peers, superiors or
others are present; the motive of the charm is deception and its purpose is to compensate
for lack of empathy
- relies on mimicry to convince others that they are a "normal" human being but
their words, writing and deeds are hollow, superficial and glib
- displays a great deal of certitude and self-assuredness to mask their insecurity
- excels at deception
- exhibits unusual inappropriate attitudes to sexual matters or sexual behaviour;
underneath the charming exterior there are often suspicions or intimations of sexual
harassment, sex discrimination or sexual abuse (sometimes racial prejudice as well)
- exhibits much controlling behaviour and is a control freak
- displays a compulsive need to criticise whilst simultaneously refusing to acknowledge,
value and praise others
- when called upon to share or address the needs and concerns of others, responds with
impatience, irritability and aggression
- often has an overwhelming, unhealthy and narcissistic need to portray themselves as a
wonderful, kind, caring and compassionate person, in contrast to their behaviour and
treatment of others; the bully is oblivious to the discrepancy between how they like to be
seen (and believe they are seen), and how they are actually seen
- has an overbearing belief in their qualities of leadership but cannot distinguish
between leadership (maturity, decisiveness, assertiveness, trust and integrity) and
bullying (immaturity, impulsiveness, aggression, distrust and deceitfulness)
- when called to account, immediately and aggressively denies everything, then
counter-attacks with distorted or fabricated criticisms and allegations; if this is
insufficient, quickly feigns victimhood, often by bursting into tears (the purpose is to
avoid answering the question and thus evade accountability by manipulating others through
the use of guilt)
- is also ... aggressive, devious, manipulative, spiteful, vengeful, doesn't listen, can't
sustain mature adult conversation, lacks a conscience, shows no remorse, is drawn to
power, emotionally cold and flat, humourless, joyless, ungrateful, dysfunctional,
disruptive, divisive, rigid and inflexible, selfish, insincere, insecure, immature and
deeply inadequate, especially in interpersonal skills
I estimate one person in thirty has this behaviour profile. I describe them as
having a disordered personality: an aggressive but intelligent individual who
expresses their violence psychologically (constant criticism etc) rather than physically
(assault). For the full profile, click here;
to see and be able to recognise the four most common types of serial bully, click here.
What does bullying do to my health?
Bullying causes injury to health and makes you ill. How many of these symptoms do you
have?
- constant high levels of stress and anxiety
- frequent illness such as viral infections especially flu and glandular fever, colds,
coughs, chest, ear, nose and throat infections (stress plays havoc with your immune system)
- aches and pains in the joints and muscles with no obvious cause; also back pain with no
obvious cause and which won't go away or respond to treatment
- headaches and migraines
- tiredness, exhaustion, constant fatigue
- sleeplessness, nightmares, waking early, waking up more tired than when you went to bed
- flashbacks and replays, obsessiveness, can't get the bullying out of your mind
- irritable bowel syndrome
- skin problems such as eczema, psoriasis, athlete's foot, ulcers, shingles, urticaria
- poor concentration, can't concentrate on anything for long
- bad or intermittently-functioning memory, forgetfulness, especially with trivial day-to-day things
- sweating, trembling, shaking, palpitations, panic attacks
- tearfulness, bursting into tears regularly and over trivial things
- uncharacteristic irritability and angry outbursts
- hypervigilance (feels like but is not paranoia), being constantly on edge
- hypersensitivity, fragility, isolation, withdrawal
- reactive depression, a feeling of woebegoneness, lethargy, hopelessness, anger, futility and more
- shattered self-confidence, low self-worth, low self-esteem, loss of self-love, etc
For the full set of symptoms of injury to health caused by prolonged negative stress
(such as that caused by bullying, harassment, abuse etc) click here. For details of the
trauma that results, click here.
More information on identifying and overcoming bullying and
its effects on health is in my book Bully in sight: how to predict, resist, challenge
and combat workplace bullying; click here for book details and
click here to order a
copy online. Bully OnLine and
the UK National Workplace Bullying Advice Line are funded by sales of Bully in sight and
David Kinchin's book Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder: the invisible injury, and Neil Marr
and Tim Field's book Bullycide:
death at playtime, an expose of child suicide caused by bullying.
Welcome to Bully
OnLine, web site of the UK National Workplace Bullying Advice
Line where Tim Field shares his unique insight into bullying and its effects on health and
profits. Explore the site by clicking the coloured text or mauve buttons at the bottom of
each page. If you have question, see the frequently asked questions page.
Where now at Bully OnLine?
How can I recognise that I'm being bullied?
What is bullying and why me? |
Definitions of bullying
Frequently asked questions (FAQs) about bullying
Overcoming myths, misperceptions and stereotypes
The answer to Why don't you stand up for yourself?
Bullying and vulnerability
Why have my colleagues deserted me?
What's the difference between bullying and mobbing?
What is harassment and discrimination?
Why grievance procedures are inappropriate for dealing with bullying
The difference between bullying and management
Facts, figures, surveys, costs of bullying |
Cost of bullying to UK plc
UK National Workplace Bullying Advice Line statistics
Profile of the serial bully - who does this describe in your life?
Antisocial Personality Disorder |
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
Paranoid Personality Disorder |
Borderline Personality Disorder
Bullies and attention-seeking behaviour
Munchausen Syndrome and MSBP
Information for nurses |
Information for voluntary sector employees
Information for teachers being bullied
Bullying of lecturers in further education
Bullying of lecturers in higher education
Bullying in the social services sector
Bullying in the public sector - the political dimension and
why trade unions fail to support their members
Bullying in the military |
Bullying of students
Scheduled training and conferences on bullying |
Other events about bullying
Articles on bullying available online
Bullying on TV, radio and in print media
Requests to take part in surveys etc |
Bullying issues needing research
Tim Field's quotes on bullying |
Vision for bullying
Feedback about Bully OnLine |
Survivor testimonies
The Secret Tragedy of Working: Work Abuse - PTSD Chauncey Hare
Bullying resources in: Australia |
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Finland |
France |
Germany |
Ireland |
Sweden |
USA
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