Bullying is one of the worst things that there is. Bullies make us feel worthless -- usually at times in our lives when we're already vulnerable. It can feel like there's no justice in the world, like it's not worth fighting back, like there's no point even going to school because it's just going to be the same song and dance all over again.
But if justice is sometimes lacking, karma seems to be more reliable.
These people recently took to the internet to share their stories of how karma got their bullies in the end. It may have taken years, but these bullies eventually learned the hard way how it must have felt to be one of their victims.
40. The rival dojo
39. The bully becomes the bullied
38. Justice isn't always swift, but it's inevitable
37. This clown doesn't blow balloons
36. This is what Facebook is for
35. Swing and a drive
34. I'm here to buy, but not from you
33. I'm bigger now, idiot
32. Billy Madison, anyone?
31. Bullies seem to have bad memories
30. I've never been glad someone got hit by a truck before
29. Crazy is as crazy does
28. Sounds like he took a bullet for you
27. Saving your bully from himself
26. The forgettable bully
We met at a bar where a large number of our high school class happened to be. My old bully described me as his arch-enemy. I realized I hadn't even thought about him in ten years. That’s really the worst insult of all, isn’t it? You’re still obsessed with hating someone who doesn’t even care that you exist anymore.
25. It turns out Rusty was a little... rusty
24. Artless
The jerk who bullied me and stole my rare Pokemon cards went to the same art school as me for a bit. Turns out he freaking SUCKS at drawing! He flunked out after a month or two. I hope my Charizard warms your cold house of failure, you talentless thief!
23. A knife to the heart has a way of changing you
22. A literal cry for help
21. Good for you for choosing to help her
20. Buffalo soldier
This girl was 'the prom queen' basically - the stereotypical mean girl dating the football player. My opinion of her was always that she was just spoiled, worthless, and dumb. I don't usually take joy in other people's misfortune, but I felt schadenfreude in unparalleled amounts the day I walked into Buffalo Wild Wings and saw her standing behind the counter.
This is maybe 10 years out of high school, she looks exactly the same. Put on some weight, maybe, but hair still done the same, still looks like she got Effie Trinket to do her makeup, so on. You can tell at a glance that she's never mentally moved past 8th grade. I asked how she'd been, tried to politely talk to her because hey I want people to do well.
She was still a bully. She was like "Ew, you're Cassie! Gross." I just raised my eyebrows at her and let it go.
Long story short, her boss was my friend. I asked him about her - single mother, just got kicked out of her mom's house, he had just hired her like 2 weeks earlier. He confronted her about talking down to customers and wound up firing her. Felt like justice.
19. Would you like fries with that?
18. The teacher learns a lesson
17. "This was one of the greatest moments of my life"
16. Teacher bullies student, pays for it years later
15. The most insulting part is the tip
14. Who's the chicken now?
13. Zed has scars too
12. I'd say you more than got even
I definitely didn't take the high road here but it was fantastic
When I was bouncing, I saw my ex-bully walk into my bar. This guy made my high school life dreadful through every method except violence (I was bigger than him by a fair margin).
I knew he lived a couple of towns over, this was small-town New Zealand after all, I also knew he was driving. I looked for his car and it was parked in a tow-away area. I gleefully called the company who handles this for us and they towed it. He was in the pub at the time, he was none the wiser. I also got one of our barbacks to follow him around and take his glass every time he put it down for more than five seconds. It was pretty busy that night and he wasn't overly bright, so again he was none the wiser.
After a few hours of this, he came outside for a smoke, where it was pouring rain, and afterward turned around to go back inside. I blocked his way and he tried to shove past me. I told him he was acting aggressively and I wouldn't be letting him back in. He starting shouting that he'd left his wallet inside, I told him that if he'd thought of that before trying to shove past me, maybe I would have gone to get it for him.
At this point, in his eyes, I stopped being a bouncer and was again the scared little 17-year-old from 7 years earlier. He took a swing at me, missed, and fell over in the gutter. He wasn't hammered, it was just that the ground was wet and he slipped.
We had a couple of cops who used to come in for a few drinks off duty every now and again, and they happened to be smokers. They saw what had happened and called their buddy who was on duty and he swung by, picked this jerk up and took him to the station to sober up.
I am not proud of my feelings about this, but seeing the guy who destroyed high school for me getting thrown into the tank after being ripped off at a pub, getting humiliated while trying to look like the big man, being sober enough to be hugely frustrated over this whole thing and knowing that when he gets out of jail in the morning, his car won't be where he'd left it made me feel great.
I never messed with him again after that, I felt we were even.
11. Being the better person is revenge enough
10. I am the manager, bully
9. "Some bullies do grow up"
My then-fiancé took me out to dinner in my hometown where we had our first date to celebrate my new promotion. I recognized our waitress right away as the girl who had been mean to me in 6th and 7th grade (The only years we had classes together). She didn't seem to recognize me (I had gained a lot of weight and the restaurant was dark) so I let it go and treated her like any other waitress.
When the bill came I asked my now-husband how we should tip. She was a great waitress and deserved a generous tip like we usually do but the urge to stiff her was there as payback. I decided to tip her generously and let the past go. But I did leave a note next to the tip: "Here's to believing that people do grow up after high school." And I signed it "Class of 20**"
The next day I got on Facebook and she had sent me a message. She said she had recognized me but I looked happy so she said nothing and she treated me like any other customer. Then she apologized for anything she might have done to me in school. It was a hard time for her and she didn't like to think about who she was then.
Some bullies do grow up and I'm glad we both did the right thing.
8. "I had changed so much, and he had stayed exactly the same"
A boy at school, [name redacted], was an absolute monster to me and my group of friends. I was raised as a fairly introverted kid and thus gravitated to people of a like mind. He could basically smell the pacifism on us and exploited it to no end. Kicked the crap outta my friends and I every chance he got, humiliated us in front of the class, basically assigned us to the lowest social rungs for most of our schooling year.
My own bio-father was a bully and violent, and it burned into me a deep-seated hatred of anyone who resorts to preying upon the weak.
Fast forward to some 8 years after school. One Friday afternoon the bully walked into my place of business looking for something we sell, and (due to the nature of our business) revealed that since leaving school, he had been caught stealing a car, gone to juvenile prison (due to age), got busted for possession, more convictions, etc. and been living at no fixed address. We were his last chance for this particular product.
Before you judge too quickly, we had been at a fairly expensive private school, so he wasn’t exactly a down-on-his-luck hobo to begin with - he had just never once stopped making bad decisions despite the opportunities given to him.
I projected an outwardly professional demeanor, denied him service, and sent him dejectedly on his way. (I was required by policy and had no actual authority over the choice, but it still felt good.)
The best part? He didn’t recognise me. He looked at the man serving him and only saw a man. I had grown and changed so much, and he had stayed exactly the same.
7. Trying to get a job from someone you hate
Tonight a guy walks into my family's convenience store to buy a pack of smokes. I know him from my days growing up here. He and his younger brother used to give me a hard time, they were real bullies, bigot types who encouraged others to pick on me and even to turn violent against me. I hated him, and his family, for taking a part of my childhood.
He was unusually friendly tonight, smiling at me and cracking lame jokes that I smiled politely at but didn't really respond to. He counted his money with his gimp hand, which was partially blown in half (taking several fingers with it) by fireworks that blew up in his hand a few years ago. I gave him his smokes and change, said thanks, and went about my business.
Before leaving, he stops, hesitates for a moment, and turns around to ask me if there are any job openings at the store. While I had heard him correctly, it's almost as if the words didn't register in my mind, so I asked him to repeat himself. He asks again, "You wouldn't happen to have any jobs available, would you?"
I explain that we're sufficiently staffed at the moment, that with my sister and I around for the summer that we wouldn't be needing anyone else to fill in the hours, which were sparse enough as is. I told him to ask again in the fall. He said that it was okay, but that he needed something now because his wife had just left him. He said thanks anyway, and walked out.
Memories of him being a jerk flashed around in my head, He had amounted to very little, and his marriage was falling apart. And now, he had to come asking for a job from the local minority he used to make fun of and claim superiority over throughout his life.
I should have enjoyed it, but I didn't. While I don't feel bad for him, not in the slightest, I don't feel like any kind of justice was served, or that karma had given him his comeuppance. If the universe is truly neutral towards what is right and wrong, then this was just the way that life played out for someone who did a lot of harm to people in his time. He could have been rich, he could have been powerful, he could have kept the use of both of his hands. But it didn't turn out that way. Karma had nothing to do with it, there was no justice.
6. Cyanide and happiness
True story. I got bullied for roughly seven years straight daily when I was in middle school and high school. I had kids tell me I should die, I got beat up and I was emotionally destroyed by everyone who treated me like the most useless, void piece of crap. I didn't feel like I should exist. I sat at home contemplating just ending it a lot.
I always loved art, drawing, and writing. During my adolescence, I retreated to the internet. I didn't want to go to clubs where those people were, yet could still talk to people. I started posting animated Flash cartoons and comics to other people who were like me for critique. Due to the bullying directed at me, I developed a rather sad sensibility towards life and an ability to quickly come back verbally at anyone who wanted to give me abuse. It was a defense mechanism for sure, but the tone shone through in the animations and comics that I drew. Through all that, I met friends and eventual co-workers.
I now draw a cartoon called Cyanide & Happiness.
The local papers write about me. That school held an assembly in my honor once recently (I was told this by a friend who now works there). I live overseas and Jonathan Ross comes to hang out with me at Comic-Con every year, where again pictures of us appear in the local paper. My former bullies know all about this. The particularly bad ones now either avoid me in bars now or try to be my best mate, and I walk around my home town beaming.
Feels good man. Thank you, internet.
5. He took his karma like a man
4. Bullying cost this guy some serious coin
3. I am not a good person, but I am happy
2. Success is the best revenge
1. "If I can change, everybody can change"
For years, I had a hard time moving past the depression and worthlessness I experienced in high school. I concocted all kinds of revenge fantasies, centered specifically on the comeuppance of one particular relentless bully, Sid. (Name changed. Sorry to the real Sids out there!)
Sid was the king of the school: you paid homage to him or else you got beat down while everybody else watched helplessly. From then on, you would get mercilessly insulted while everybody else laughed nervously.
I decided one day that somebody needed to stand up to this tyrant, and that person was going to be me. Maybe I thought I was going to be a hero. All I knew was that I just didn't want to be part of this schoolyard arrangement anymore, so one day I refused to lick his boots. Sid told a joke and I didn't laugh. He noticed: "What, you didn't think that was funny? The [bleep] is wrong with you... Come here."
I knew what was coming but I thought I could take it. And I could at first. I could hold my own, and I didn't back down. I never gave in to Sid again. But day after day, week after week, having to physically fight for my life and endure insults not only from Sid but now from the entire school who just went along with whatever Sid said -- it all became too much for me and I broke down emotionally.
I dropped out of high school and became a recluse. I had no friends and a family who didn't know how to deal with me. I was like a zombie shuffling his way through life. And I stayed that way for years, not knowing how to get myself out of the hole.
Eventually, I turned to writing as an outlet. It worked: it enabled me to work out my feelings and go over them again and again until I understood why I felt the way I did. I started submitting my work to various places, and one day, I stepped out of my house and into the real world: I had been hired as a magazine journalist.
As a journalist, I became committed to two things: seeking the truth and helping the downtrodden. I'm sure you can see why. Both of those passions eventually led me to Jesus. As a newly recommitted Christian, I poured myself into efforts to heal from my past and mature into my present.
I realized that I had a lot of room to grow: even as a high schooler when I was so busy painting myself as a victim, I was dealing with a lot of anger and immaturity within myself. I had to confront the idea that there were probably days when I was the one who went out looking for a fight.
I told myself that yeah, Sid was a jerk, but hey, maybe I was, too. To take a page from Rocky: "If I can change ... everybody can change." I let go of my anger and my pain. I was at peace. I even prayed for Sid!
Fast forward a few years: I move and need to find a new church. As I walk into the first one I visit, I hear a voice: "Is that you?" I turn around and see Sid standing there with a big grin on his face. I feel myself clinch a fist -- force of habit.
"It's so good to see you," he says. After the shock wears off, I manage to say the same and actually kind of mean it though I don't know why.
"I know we couldn't always say that before," he continues. "I'm sorry..." He starts to say something else, but can't find the words.
His lips start to tremble, and he lets out a long sigh. His eyes get watery.
"I... I'm really sorry for the things I did back then. To you, to everybody. I didn't think I'd have to deal with this again, but here you are staring me right in the face. In church, of all places." He lets out a half-hearted chuckle.
That's when I realized that he did still have to deal with this again because I still needed to deal with this. This was my last step.
I reached over, put my hand gently on his shoulder, and told him, "I've changed a lot since then. And I can see that you have, too." He broke down crying.
I never thought in a million years that Sid could be affected by our high school experience even more than I was. That got us talking, not just about high school, but about finding Jesus, about finding growth.
Over the years, we've actually become good friends. I used to dream about gouging Sid's eyes out and kicking him down forty flights of stairs. Now I call him over to help me move some furniture and invite him to stay for dinner.
Revenge fantasies are fun in their own time, but the greater reality is good-willed reconciliation. President Lincoln said it best: "Do I not destroy my enemies when I make them my friends?"