Previously run in the Penobscot Bay Pilot. 
I’ve been following this Orono cyberbullying case very closely since 
it broke on the statewide scene. The Bangor Daily News reports: Teen cyberbully pleads guilty to terrorizing former Orono schoolmate.
 Every day, I receive stories all over the world like this: kids getting
 defamed, libeled, psychologically tortured by other kids through 
digital devices. This 16-year-old girl, Lexi Henkel, was incredibly 
brave to take her story public as her 17-year-old tormentor terrorized 
Lexi and her family to the point of vacating their home, moving schools 
and pushing Lexi to the brink of suicide.
So often, it seems as 
though adults aren’t truly waking up to the potential destruction of 
cyberbullying until a teenager is on the brink of suicide.
I’m not
 glad this happened; but I’m glad it became public. In Maine, I don’t 
think adults are fully comprehending how destructive cyberbullying can 
be. Since September, I’ve visited and spoken to parents and educators 
from at least 40 Maine schools to provide some perspective around the 
motivations behind certain types of cyberbullying and how to prevent it.
  Most adults leave with a better understanding that there's not a 
“one-size-fits-all” solution; that each incident needs to be thoroughly 
understood before it can be strategically dealt with. But I’ve actually 
had a few teachers tell me: “We don’t have cyberbullying at our school.”
They
 are not seeing it, because they’re not part of the kids’ digital 
networks, but it’s there.  At its highest extreme, it becomes known to 
the principal and a news story. At its lowest to medium level, it’s 
being done covertly, through texting, email, Instagram, Facebook and 
Twitter. But it’s there.
But let me go back to this Orono story 
for a moment, because worse than the “cyberbullying doesn’t exist” 
mindset is the “suck it up” mindset.
Take for example this anonymous poster “Hussar” who wrote a comment in response to this Orono story:
What
 ever happened to "sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will 
never hurt me?" It appears that we are raising a generation of over 
emotional crybabies, scared of their own shadows, that need the nanny 
state to protect their feelings from being hurt. I am sorry, for Ms. 
Henkel's pubescence angst, but this is classic case of taking ourselves 
and perceived dangers to our children way too seriously.
He 
read the same story as everyone else. He saw that these weren’t some 
mild, adolescent outbursts. The posts threatened the girl’s life and 
safety. Here’s an example of a few of them:
 • “Ready for tomorrow
 night? I’d learn to sleep with your eyes open if I were you. I’m 
dulling my knife right now so when I stab you in the face, gut and legs 
it’ll be painful as possible.”
• “You know how all these 
environmental friendly groups say that waste should be properly disposed
 of? Well, come on Lexi, do the world a favor, and properly dispose of 
your [expletive deleted] self!”
• “Your face is like a baby seal. Fat, furry and just asking to be clubbed to death.”
Law
 101: A "criminal threat" is when you threaten to kill or physically 
harm someone either in person or electronically. These are not “sticks 
and stones” comments. But unfortunately, I’ve seen this mindset appear 
in multiple comments to hundreds of cyberbullying stories I’ve read 
through.  It’s not about “protecting their feelings about being hurt” 
it’s about protecting vulnerable young people from being threatened, 
defamed, libeled and psychologically tortured—you know, the very types 
of behavior that will land an adult in court. Just because they’re 
minors doesn’t mean they don’t have the same legal rights and 
protections as adults.
Yet, in several Maine schools I’ve visited,
 students have come up to me after a presentation and told me in 
confidence that “adults don’t know how to deal with cyberbullying” and 
that “all this talk that they were going to stop it” has basically been 
seen as lip-service.
So what happens is: when influential people 
like “Hussar” reiterate this specious “suck it up” mindset; teens who 
are being badly cyberbullied feel completely unprotected. Like hunted 
animals, they feel they will never escape the torment, never find peace 
or a normal life again—and sometimes they look to the extreme choices.
As Lexi’s mother Judy Henkel wrote in response to “Hussar”:
Know
 your facts before you write an opinion such as you did. You haven't 
read the emails Lexi recieved, you haven't heard your daughter say that 
taking her own life would be easier then having to go through all this. 
Having your daughter tell you she is thinking of taking her life so it 
would all stop is just like having a knife plundged (sic) into your 
heart.
Thankfully, with the staunch support of 
Lexi’s parents, her community and the police, Lexi has been able to tell
 her story. I don’t know if she will ever feel safe again as she does 
her best to resume a normal life, but she has given voice to a 
deep-seated problem that hides in the very insular walls of social media
 and electronic communication that we adults don’t often get a chance to
 see. This is probably one of the biggest cyberbullying wake up calls 
Maine has seen. . and these kids need your protection.
Kay Stephens is the co-author of Cyberslammed: Understand, Prevent, Combat and Transform the Most Common Cyberbullying Tactics,
 published this year and sponsored by Time Warner Cable. She has been 
doing presentations to Maine schools on specific cyberbullying threats 
and how to understand, prevent, combat and transform them. She is also 
the editor of FTCTC's monthly teen-focused feature, Sound Off, designed to increase the number of youth who have one of the protective 
factors that helps keep kids out of trouble—recognition for pro-social 
involvement. To see more 
posts oncyberbullying, visit Kay Stephens on The Pen Bay Pilot.
