If she really was sorry, we wouldn't have got her life story. That is irrelevant. This isn't a chat show, hun x
Accountability feels like bullying if you don't realise what you did was wrong.Final point but I hate the phrasing of 'it's taught empathy to a sheltered defensive kid. Which is kinda the point, right?' like yes, but it doesn't really seem like you've learnt very much when you can't demonstrate how and are deleting criticism. A lot of the points in her apology are valid but not applicable to Polly's situation if we look at current actions of blame shifting and not accounting for her actions in any way.
This apology kinda demonstrated to me that nothing she says can redeem this because she isn't grasping the fact people cannot see the change in who she is now and she isn't able to demonstrate it or see why she needs to. Actions speak louder than words, her actions do not back up the apology.
And the key word of an apology ‘SORRY’ only appears once says everything it needs to about her characterWhat stood out in that post was the amount of times Polly used ‘I’ or ‘me’ or ‘mine’. I counted and it was around 90 times across that post. If anything sums up her ‘apology’ it’s that. Utterly self absorbed and no awareness of the impact she’s had
Hi Polly!Her dad's gone private
Exactly. Her sorry, not sorry is leaving a worst taste in the mouth than the radio silence.A lot of the people posting here were customers who supported her business, many of which are from the communities she publicly persecuted for several years. I don't think we're the bullies here, Polly.
I think he secretly agrees that Tom looks scruffy and smellyHer dad's gone private
Speaking as a teacher, the absolute LAST thing that education in the UK needs right now is this kind of virtue signalling nonsense. We work so hard with the right agencies and professionals and she clearly has no idea what the real world is like. The absolute nerve of her asking teachers for their help to try and make herself feel better is unbelievable. I am far too busy educating the children in my class to, in her own words, tell her something that she can ‘listen to, to inform her in the future’.I simply don't think that of all the people who could go into schools and deliver diversity training and anti-bullying training, Polly would be the most qualified to do this. Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought more can be learnt from the victims rather than the perpetrators.