Wednesday 22 October 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight - Overcoming Bullies

REMINDER: This Sunday, 26 October, at 2:00 AM, the clocks go back one hour.


Church Gate Collection for Solas Family Resource Centre is November 8 and 9 in Shrule and Glencorrib. If you've ever taken advantage of the services that Solas offers, please consider contributing. And thanks to all those who did contribute at the last collection.


COMMUNITY SERVICE 
Overcoming Bullies

In primary school, she was the little beast who stole the toy you were playing with and called your clothes ‘cheap and ugly.’

In secondary school, she sat with her clique at lunchtime and whispered about you, pointing and laughing, maybe even throwing food at the back of your head.

But now you’re older, wiser. You like your clothes, you have trusted friends, and you walk down the street with a sense of confidence.

That is, until 9:00 am, when you skulk past her corner office and pray she doesn’t call you in and scream at you, adding yet another project to your overly-heavy workload.

The bully never dies. She or he merely changes form.

At Solas, we hear a lot of stories about bullying, across all age groups. If you or someone you know has been a victim of bullying, please keep reading. This article is chock-full of resources that may be able to help.
WHY DO THEY DO IT?
In order to deal with this problem, it helps to understand why it happens in the first place. So, why is it that some people feel the need to hurt and humiliate others?  What do they really stand to gain from this cruel behaviour?

According to psychotherapist, Katie Hurley, bullies are not born, they are raised. Bullying, at its core, is a learned behaviour that is used in response to stress.  It is an attempt to gain superiority or control over another.

Many researchers say that bullying in the workplace has increased due to the economic depression putting undue stress on management, causing them to lash out at employees.

Bullies—whatever their age—tend to have a few things in common:
  • Immature social skills
  • Lack of compassion and empathy
  • Poor impulse control
  • Watch more aggressive TV shows and play more aggressive video games
Whatever the reason, bullying is always, always unacceptable. 

WHO ARE THE VICTIMS?
As annoying as the TV shrink, Dr. Phil is, his adage, ‘We teach people how to treat us,’ rings true, especially when it comes to the victims of bullying.

Dr. Phil’s advice . . . If someone in your life is treating you in an undesirable way, figure out what you are doing to reinforce, elicit or allow that treatment. Identify the payoffs you may be giving someone in response to any negative behaviour. For example, when people are aggressive, bossy or controlling — and then get their way — you have rewarded them for unacceptable behaviour. This includes your boss!

Commit to changing things and don’t revert back to destructive patterns. To talk about change and not do it is to teach that person to treat your statements and declarations lightly. Although it will likely be difficult to effect change, you must not compromise. To compromise in this area is to sell out your most precious commodity: you.

WHY DOES IT MATTER?
As the example at the top of this article shows, a bully who is not stopped, grows like a fungus.

According to Dr. Christine Porath, a Georgetown University professor in Washington, D.C., who studies workplace incivility, it’s not easy to convince already-overworked business leaders to pay attention to the issue of workplace bullying. The key, she says, is showing them how incivility takes a toll on productivity by showing how it costs them money.
Irish Statistics compiled by Rayner and Keashley in 2004, estimated that for an organisation of 100 employees, the cost of workplace bullying, including replacement cost of employees who leave, would be $1.2 million. That estimate did not include the cost of litigation should victims bring a claim against their employer. In the intervening ten years since that study, the cost to employers has undoubtedly increased.

Many people endure a golden-handcuff job, choosing to remain in a workplace where bullying exists simply because they feel they can’t afford to leave. In fact, a Neuro survey found that only 9% of people are happy at work. Uncomfortable and conflicted work environments lead to plummeting productivity, increased stress, hindered performance, high turnover rate, and absenteeism. As people in the Headford area know well, extreme conflict can even lead to suicide and death. One national study found that just watching someone get bullied at work is linked to depressive symptoms.

THE LAW IS ON YOUR SIDE
In Schools
Under civil law, schools and the board of management owe a duty of care to students while they are at school. If they do not protect students from injuries which they should have reasonably prevented, the school can be held negligent. If an act by a student places another student in reasonable apprehension of physical harm, it may constitute an assault under civil law. There is no age of responsibility under civil law.

In the Workplace
The Health and Safety Authority requires that employers take reasonable steps to prevent bullying in the workplace. There should be an anti-bullying policy and established procedures for dealing with complaints of bullying in the workplace. An employer should deal with such complaints immediately. If you follow the established procedures to complain about bullying and your employer does not deal with the issue, you do have recourse under the law.
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
Behaviour Modification
The first and strongest thing you can do to prevent bullying is to change your behaviour. A few of the ways you might do this include:

Believe that you are stronger than the bully, because deep down, you really are

Show minimal reaction to bullying or stand up and walk away with dignity

Above all, be sure to stand up for others if you see they are being bullied. Witnesses dis-empower the bully.
Do not make jokes at your own expense or try to prove to the bully that there is nothing they can do to hurt your feelings. Jokes will not defuse the tension; they just fuel the fire.

Laugh at anything the bully says, or recite a totally irrelevant quote or lyric, like: ‘Follow the yellow brick road!’ This can surprise the bully, cause laughter, or give you time to get away.

Ask your school or workplace to offer talks or seminars on bullying, putting it in the front of everyone’s mind.

Take Action
Keep an accurate, written log of all instances of bullying, including the date and time of each occurrence, the names of people involved, as well as the names of any witnesses. Keep the original of this document safe at home. This step is crucial.

Approach the bully and point out their behaviour, using a specific example. Say it’s hostile and offensive, and that you wish them to stop.

If you are too frightened to do this, take a copy of your written log of the bullying behaviour and its effects on you, to a manager or to HR. Proving that you have something in writing gives you power in this situation.

It may be necessary to progress to mediation. Again, this is why keeping a written log is crucial.
Further Action
The HSA offers instructions online for What To Do If You Feel You Are Being Bullied. Points of contact include the Workplace Contact Unit of the HSA: 1890.289.389 and the Labour Relations Commission: http://www.hsa.ie/eng/Workplace_Health/Bullying_at_Work/Are_you_being_Bullied/

Books
Some excellent books are available on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk. For example:

Stop Picking On Me (A First Look at Bullying) by Pat Thomas and Lesley Harker

Take the Bully by the Horns by Sam Horn

The Bully at Work: What You Can Do to Stop the Hurt and Reclaim Your Dignity on the Job
by Gary and Ruth Namie

Help Online
The Kind Campaign: https://www.kindcampaign.com/
Formed by two girls who had been affected by female bullying, this campaign includes a documentary film and school assembly programme with specific steps for overcoming the problem. Watch them in action in this short film clip: http://news.yahoo.com/kind-campaign-against-bullying-105145162.html

Counselling
Sometimes, all you need is someone to help you form a plan of action. Toward that end, Solas offers confidential and affordable counselling service.

Legal Help
Ultimately, if you’ve followed all the channels and the bullying situation has not been dealt with or has not been dealt with effectively, it may be necessary to seek legal assistance. Terry Gorry, an employment rights solicitor in County Meath offers quite a bit of information on his website. For instance, there’s an important difference between occupational stress, workplace stress and bullying. The first two are not actionable offenses, but bullying, defined as inappropriate and repeated behaviour, is. To find out more, visit this link:


One Galway solicitor with years of labour law experience says that if a client came to her with a bullying complaint, she’d most likely recommend taking the case to civil court. ‘But the bullying has to manifest in personal injury,’ she advises. ‘It needs to be something diagnosed by a consultant as a medical condition.’ For instance, bullying can result in psychological symptoms and emotional distress like sleep loss, anxiety, fear, depression, humiliation, as well as physical disorders like stomach distress, ulcers, and headaches. When emotional or physical symptoms occur, it is important to get your GP involved as early as possible to make sure there is a written record of the stress associated with your workplace. The Galway solicitor says, ‘You need concrete, objective proof,’ and documentation from a medical professional is a good way to get that proof. 

If the bullying becomes unbearable and you are forced to leave your job, you may be entitled to compensation under the Employment Appeals Tribunal. However, it is recommended that you obtain legal advice about your rights before leaving your job. 


While all of the steps listed in this article can help, ultimately, bullying must be addressed in the same manner that racial and other forms of discrimination have been tackled. With protection that is written into law. 

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Headford News and Community Spotlight - Doing What Comes Naturally

Tomorrow night, Thursday, 16 October at 7:30 pm, don't miss Maev Creaven, registered Nutritional Therapist and Functional Medicine Practitioner. She'll be at the Headford Parish Hall giving a talk on natural health and wellness through nutrition. The evening's topic, The Truth and Myth About Thyroid Health is free and will contain loads of valuable information.

COMMUNITY SPOTLIGHT 


This Sunday, 19th October 2014, marks the end of an era. No, it’s not the end of an ice age, and Queen Elizabeth has not yet handed the crown over to Charlie. It’s not even the last day of the semi-annual Brown Thomas sale. Nonetheless, it is the end of an epoch, for both Headford and County Galway. On October 19th at 6 pm, Headford resident, Tom Geraghty will perform his last ‘TG on Sunday’ show, to be broadcast live on Galway Bay FM.
Tom Geraghty, TG on Sunday
After sixteen years of playing old favourites and classics peppered with information and chat, Tom will be retiring. Always a modest fellow, Tom, who is father to four and grandfather to seven, beams when he says, ‘The whole family are comin’ in for the last show.’ Then, he immediately gets shy. So when someone asks, ‘Will you miss it, Tom, doing the show?’ A lopsided grin touches Tom’s face, and a twinkle dances in his eye before he quips, ‘Oh, I can’t get out of there quick enough.’

But Tom’s a veteran performer—a ‘natural,’ so they say—and one might rightly suspect that it’s not so easy to give up a career in the spotlight and ‘go gentle into that good night.’

The first act of Tom’s career started with the Galway Post Office, where he worked delivering the post. ‘It was one of the most enjoyable times in my life,’ Tom says, ‘Because that’s when I met Lily.’

Lily, Tom’s wife of 52 years, helps him tell this story in a charming way. They take turns, like two good actors. Back in 1960, Lily was working as a telephonist at the post office. Tom had noticed her at work but didn’t have the courage to ask her out. Then, one Sunday, Tom and a bunch of other lads were sitting on O’Brien’s bridge watching the girls go by, as they did every Sunday after mass. When Lily walked by, Tom did what came naturally, and asked her out.

‘I said “No,” of course,’ Lily remembers, ‘but he was very persistent.’

‘Finally,’ Tom says, ‘I told her I had tickets to a social (a dinner and dance).’

Lily continues, ‘Then I couldn’t say no because he’d already bought the tickets.’
They were married in 1962, and because of that bizarre archaic law, Lily had to give up her job at the post office. But Tom kept going, delivering the post in Galway, Headford and Dublin for a total of 39 years. That included getting dog bites that required stiches and driving the mail van all the way to Clifden each day.



During the second act of Tom’s life, he headed up the local St. Vincent de Paul Society and was Chairman of the Headford GAA. But it was his involvement in theatre that propelled him to local stardom. In the 1970s, he’d moved back to Headford (he’s now living next door to where he grew up), and became passionate about the stage. ‘We had a terrific drama group,’ Tom says. The Headford Drama Group eventually morphed into ‘Pegasus.’ Tom shows me a photo taken in 1915 (well before his time) of the Headford Drama Society in full costume for a production of ‘Colleen Bawn.' Clearly, there was a time when theatre was taken seriously in Headford.

Headford Drama Group's production of Colleen Bawn (1915)


‘We won three All Irelands in the 1970’s,’ Tom says. He was also in national productions for the Irish Drama Festival. So when Lily says, ‘He was very good. Everybody said he was very natural on stage,’ it seems like an understatement. Especially when you consider the way the third act in Tom’s life began . . .

Tom circa 1970s production of I Do Not Like Thee Dr. Fell





It was during one of those award-winning Irish Drama Festival productions that Tom was approached by a CEO from Galway Bay FM. He was chosen to take over a country/western show from John Francis King, and eventually given his own programme.

‘I didn’t even know what a cd was,’ Tom remembers, ‘but the station rep told me, “You won’t be too long here before you figure it out.”’ A friend gave him some cds to get him started and Tom says he still has the same cd player he had when he started this gig back in 1998.

‘Oh, it scared the life outa me,’ Tom says.

‘It scared me even more,’ Lily deadpans. ‘I was always afraid of what he might say next.’

But Tom says, he did ‘whatever came naturally’ on air during his shows, and since he’s still at it 16 years later, Lily must be right. He’s a natural.

Though the curtain will come down on TG on Sunday this week, Tom’s still active in the community. When asked if he has any words of wisdom to offer, Tom thinks about it for a while before saying, ‘I’d advise people to get involved.’ His own life is a testament to the fact that getting involved keeps you going strong.

Don’t miss TG on Sunday, Galway Bay FM (95.8), 6 to 8 pm this Sunday, October 19, 2014 for the last time!