I don’t know if this is something people say in other countries, but in my country, there’s this common cliché or “wisdom” where adults will assure you that the people who picked on you in environments like school will universally develop lives of hardship later on, one way or another getting into mayhem.

I asked my mother one day what happened to all those people growing up. I can sense she may have been sugar coating it, but she said something along the lines of “well, I waited, and waited, and waited, and waited, and waited, and became a teacher, and waited some more, and finally watched as my bullies had to go into retirement five years late, yay” (okay, not really like that, but it might as well have been).

Yeah, common theme in my experience that what we hope for is never “that” set in stone. No matter where in the community (or even long-distance communicating) you knew them from, based on life, how much approximate correspondence do you associate with that mindset in the first paragraph?

  • CrazyLikeGollum@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    There was pretty much only one guy I knew as a kid who was actually a bad person, rather than just another kid with all of the emotional instability and executive dysfunction that entails.

    He wound up raping his girlfriend, shooting her, and then when the cops responded to a report of the gun shot he pulled a gun on them and got himself shot by the police.