"Just Ignore Them" was what I tried, and violence against myself only escalated. Anyone I ever had a fight with, left me alone afterwards.
Ditto. I got left alone for
years after an incident in 6th grade where I went completely over-the-top, psycho, HULK SMASH on a group of people.
One good win is all you need to earn some breathing room in the snakepit that is the schoolyard hierarchy. For one thing, it becomes this weird prestige deterrent. If you're a puny nerd, and you actually beat somebody in a fight, not only do you gain respect, but the person who lost becomes the new omega for his pack ("you lost to THAT guy? hahaha you suck"). Once you've demonstrated the potential to beat somebody, it's no longer worth the risk for most bullies, because the prestige gain for beating you up would still be rather minimal, but the loss if they lose would be substantial. As long as you don't force a confrontation by directly challenging them, you can get by without much incident. BUT...if you've never shown any fight at all in you (and have no allies), you're an easy target. Bread and butter for prestige gain via daily harassment.
Buddy of mine had the best win: guy challenged him to a fight in the parking lot, thinking it was an easy win. During the fight, his wallet fell out of his pocket, and because he assumed my buddy was no threat, he bent over to pick it up. Buddy grabbed him around the waist and backpedalled hard, driving the guy's head into the tailgate of a pickup truck. Fight over, TKO. Harassment of him dropped off vastly for the remainder of high school. (and the other guy became the new "bitch" of that particular clique of prep-jocks).
I dunno...maybe this is why America is the way it is. We learn early on that you have to fight to be left alone.
Another post: @Glyph - Nobody in this post has ever said you shouldn't defend yourself if you're attacked. The difference is that RedKing, MSH and the others thinks it's okay to attack before signs of aggression and threat is even known or shown. That's what the discussion have been about.
scriver, you're a bro and all but dude...I don't think we've ever said that. Ever. "holding family at knifepoint" was one of the scenarios discussed earlier. Even if no actual bodily harm has occurred, I think I'd qualify "at knifepoint" as aggression and threat. The possible grey area would be "has broken into your house, but not actually confronted you". I think our position is that breaking and entering, as a voluntary choice to intrude illegally on another's property, *does* constitute a threat in and of itself. People don't break and enter to leave you gifts or get interior decorating tips. They do it to harm your person and/or steal your property. Both of which constitute aggression in my book.
What we were catching hell over was the idea that we wouldn't necessarily break off the response once the attacker was fleeing. Nobody here was suggesting anything like a Trayvon Martin-type scenario where you go chasing after somebody because they "look suspicious".