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Confronting the bully: When despair becomes tragedy

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Nancy Walz, with her son, Ryan, and daughter, Emilie, play with their dogs, Sasha and Maya, in the back of their home in Johnsburg. Nancy Walz's son, Scott, took his own life in 2010 after many years of bullying. (Josh Peckler – jpeckler@shawmedia.com)

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One of the biggest conversations in our nation today is about bullying.

These days, bullying is more than just the schoolyard squabbles remembered by an older generation. It’s becoming more intense and it’s happening all over – including our own backyard.

In Crystal Lake, senior Nick Romita has a rare blood disorder that stunted his growth and made his bones brittle. Bullying has sent him to the emergency room.

In Johnsburg, a young student with severe hemophilia has been punched and hit by peers. The blows can be life-threatening.

Violence resulting from bullying is gaining more attention as an increasing number of young people are taking their lives after being harassed, tormented, humiliated and intimidated by their peers.

Missouri mother Tina Meier, mother of 13-year-old Megan Meier, told a McHenry audience last year how her daughter hanged herself after being cyberbullied by the mother of a classmate.

Three teenage boys – one in Houston, another in Greensburg, Ind., and the third in Tehachapi, Calif. – committed suicide within a matter of weeks in 2010, all after being bullied.

And then there’s Scott Walz. Months away from his Johnsburg High School graduation, Walz committed suicide after being subjected to years of bullying.

These stories are not unique. In a four-part series starting today, the Northwest Herald will bring bullying into the local conversation.

SFlbWhat is bullying?

Researchers define bullying as a repeated pattern of aggressive behavior that involves an imbalance of power and purposefully inflicts hardship or harm on those who are bullied. Leading bullying research indicates there are serious and long-term consequences to this form of torment, such as increased depression, substance abuse, aggressive impulses and school truancy.

“When I was growing up, I got bullied and it was a rite of passage, but we didn’t have the degrees of violence that we have now,” said Cjay Harmer, a peer intervention specialist with Pioneer Center for Human Services, which is based in McHenry. “I think we’re just noticing it more now because we choose to look at it.”

Bullying started gaining national attention after two Columbine High School students in Littleton, Colo., shot 13 classmates before turning their guns on themselves. The shooters were believed to have been bullied.

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