Sad study finds bullies aren't depressed, just naturally jerks
Bullies are often portrayed as big, mean dopes with secretly terrible home lives—think Nelson on The Simpsons—but a new study suggests that may not (always) be the case.
In fact, according to research published in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, high school-aged bullies are less depressed, more popular, and more likely to get dates than their allegedly less-cool classmates. Cue the Debbie Downer music.
The researchers hypothesized that “bullying” is a trait that’s been passed on for generations—or in the words of Darwin, “naturally selected.” They reasoned that, often, the physical and personality traits that make bullies who they are—bigger, faster, stronger, manipulative, egotistical—are advantageous for survival and gaining sexual advantages. And in our society, those same attributes tend to make people more popular.
To test their theory, the researchers studied 135 adolescents, ages 13 to 16, from a secondary school in Canada. The students were asked to fill out questionnaires that measured whether they were a bully, a victim, a bully/victim, or a bystander. Questions included phrases like “I was hit, kicked or shoved,” and could be answered on a scale of never to several times a week.
The students were also measured for self-esteem, depression, and social status.
Eleven percent of the students were identified as bullies, eight percent were victims, eight percent were bully/victims (i.e. students who experience both), and 73 percent were bystanders. As for the gender breakdown, more men than women were bullies (73 percent versus 27 percent, respectively).
As for their mental health? While it might be nice to imagine that the guy shoving you against your locker has no real friends, or is secretly sad about life—this study (which, admittedly, was quite small) showed the opposite.
Bullies had the lowest levels of depression, highest self-esteem, and highest social status, with victims fairing the second worst and bystanders fairing second best. This chart sums it up.
“These findings suggest that being a bully promotes better mental health, whether it is through the bullying behaviors themselves, or as a corollary of being a bully (i.e., being placed higher in the social rank),” write the authors in the study. “The results suggest that bullies, particularly in relation to bully/victims, gain specific benefits from their aggression and help provide evidence that bullying fulfills the advantageous variation component of natural selection.”