ABSTRACT
This paper is a personal account of
being mobbed and bullied over the past four and half years. This whole
experience began on October 26th 2009, with what the literature describes as the Critical Incident.
Despite the fact that the assessment instrument had not been published,
and accompanying medical documentation provided a context for what had
occurred, people decided to ignore this information and utilized this
incident to demonstrate that what the author had done was unethical and
required swift retribution by the University. However, following an
administrative review, it was determined that the author had not
committed this alleged offence. Certain individuals were appalled and
refused to abide by this decision. The outcome was that over the next
four and half years the author was subjected to many of the experiences
that Leymann, Davenport, Schwartz and Elliot, Friedenberg, Khoo, and
Westhues describe in typologies of bullying and mobbing. The most serious consequence was that on July 23rd
2012 the author suffered an Ischemic stroke. Not only was the author’s
medical health compromised during this experience; this experience had a
devastating impact on his emotional well-being, career and professional
development. Within the School of Social Work, I was unable to receive
peer support, administrative acknowledgement or empathy regarding the
impact that this illness had regarding my well-being. What was even more
troubling was the University’s unwillingness to confront the bullying
and mobbing. Instead, with no resolution the school leadership continues
to hold onto earlier accusations and through communications and
interactions blame the victim.
Key words: mobbing,
bullying, mental health consequences, physical health repercussions,
personal and professional ramifications, critical incident method
Full paper
2 comments:
a truly chilling account of what its like to be a victim of bullying....
Quiet sad indeed.
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