Bill,
Well I didn't LET him bully me any more - so the end result was the same I
guess!

Funnily enough I saw him at a junior school reunion about 3 years ago. He
was 50, fat, slovenly with 5 kids living on social after leavin school at 15
with a wife who looked like it was her that did the bullying as I certainly
wouldn't have argued with her. 

He was only about 5ft 4" tall and I towered over him being 6' 1" and
although I am quite outgoing he wouldn't say boo to a goose!

What goes around....comes around I guess!

Dave Crozier


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Bill Arnold
Sent: 11 May 2007 10:19
To: 'ProFox Email List'
Subject: RE: [OT] Race to the Bottom


Dave, but the guy didn't bully you anymore, did he? 

As a young lad and a minority "paddy boy" in a reform school where the
power was mostly black and Puerto Rican, they intimidated and bullied me
for a little while, but I decided there was no future in that, so I
worked up the courage to challenge the toughest guy to a fight. While he
got the better of the fight, I did put everything into it, and he/they
did leave me alone, and he and I actually became cordial to each other
after that.

Years later, with kids of my own, I taught them that if they were ever
bullied that they had no choice but to fight - and not to just jump
around, but "go nuts" on the bully. Eventually the two boys did have an
incident each, but that was it. 

This is over-simplified, but it is the essence of what happened.


Bill




> Michael,
> That's not totally true. I was picked on by a bully when I 
> was about 10. My father was an Amateur Boxing champion in the 
> army and told me the old chestnut about bullies don't like to 
> be hurt and that if you hit them they will back down etc etc.
> 
> So I tried what he said on day when I had had enough and 
> whacked the guy on the nose "just like my dad said" - he just 
> looked at me with blood spurting from his nose and then 
> proceeded to give me the biggest thrashing he could. So much 
> for the information and advice!
> 
> I did learn three important lessons though:
> 
> 1. If you give your best shot and it doesn't work then be 
> prepared to run...quickly. If you don't, prepare for a good kicking.
> 
> 2. Never trust advice from someone who doesn't really 
> understand your situation - even if it is your dad.
> 
> 3. He who fights and runs away...lives to fight another day.
> 
> 4. The guys who are fitter and bigger are usually dumber and 
> slower so fight them on your own terms with cunning and 
> guile. He never did know who stole the wheels off his bike. <BG>
> 
> Dave Crozier



[excessive quoting removed by server]

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