Light Rain
55°
Crystal Lake, IL
Light Rain|Forecast »

'Finding Kind' film looks bullying in the eye

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Related Links

To order DVDs of Northwest Herald videos call 815.526.4611.

McHENRY – “Finding Kind” opens with a young girl talking about thoughts of suicide. The girl, Holly, uses her sweatshirt sleeve to wipe away tears as she speaks. She was bullied by other girls at school.

Hers was one of many emotional stories audience members heard Wednesday night in a viewing of the film.

From there, “Finding Kind,” a documentary by Lauren Parsekian and Molly Thompson, takes viewers on what the filmmakers described as an “emotional roller coaster.”

It follows the young women as they circled the United States on a month-and-a-half, eye-opening journey to get to the bottom of the often cruel and hurtful “girl world.”

Parsekian and Thompson were at McHenry High School – West Campus for Town Against Tragedy 3 and to show their documentary.

The pair, both 25, never intended to start an anti-bullying campaign, they said before the event. They simply wanted to look deeper into the female psyche to discover what makes women and girls be so hurtful to one another.

“Once we turned on the cameras, we saw how open and honest women and girls were being about their experiences,” Thompson said.

“Finding Kind” and the film’s sister nonprofit, The Kind Campaign, started gaining momentum and national media attention, and now the two women have traveled the country with their message. They estimate that in a short four years they’ve taken The Kind Campaign to 450 schools and the film has been shown in thousands more.

A group of students, now seniors, who saw “Finding Kind” at the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake, thought their classmates would benefit from a viewing and took the idea of bringing in the documentary and filmmakers to Assistant Principal Carl Vallianatos.

“We thought it’d be good for our school to see,” said Josie Hobbs, 17. “There’s a lot of girl-on-girl bullying [at our school]. Lots of girl fights.”

Boys could benefit from the film, too, Laura D’Angelo said.

“It gives guys an understanding of how we function and how guys can play a role in bullying,” the 17-year-old said, adding that boys often are at the root of conflicts between girls.

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

How often do you go boating?

As often as possible
A few times a season
Once in a while
Never