No
one must shut his eyes and regard as non-existent the suffering of which he
spared himself the sight. -- Albert Schweitzer
Teen
Creates App So Bullied Kids Never Have To Eat Alone
You're at a cafeteria, you've got your lunch ... and then you
just don't know where to sit. You don't want to sit alone, but you also don't
know who would be friendly and let you sit with them. Sixteen-year-old Natalie
Hampton has been there. She's an 11th-grader from Sherman Oaks, Calif., and the
creator of a new app called Sit With Us.
Hampton recently spoke about the app with All Things Considered host Audie Cornish. A transcript of their conversation follows,
edited for clarity.
This
is a great idea, but I understand it kind of comes from a sad place, right? I
mean, essentially because you had a pretty lonely experience at lunchtime.
Yeah, I did. At my old school, I was completely ostracized by
all of my classmates, and so I had to eat lunch alone every day. When you walk
into the lunchroom and you see all the tables of everyone sitting there and you
know that going up to them would only end in rejection, you feel extremely
alone and extremely isolated, and your stomach drops. And you are searching for
a place to eat, but you know that if you sit by yourself, there'll be so much
embarrassment that comes with it because people will know and they'll see you
as the girl who has nowhere to sit. So there's so many awful feelings that come
along with it.
You eventually changed schools, and you did make friends in this
new school. But it sounds like you couldn't shake that feeling, right — that
experience.
Well, I felt that if I was thriving in a new school but didn't
do anything about the people who feel like this every single day, then I'm just
as bad as the people who watched me eat alone. I felt like, with my story, it
was my job to stand up and do something about all the kids who feel like this
every day. And I wanted to create something that would address bullying, but in
a positive way.
So you get this idea for an app, and how did you want it to work?
The way that it works is it's a free lunch-planning app where
kids can find lunch tables if they feel like they have nowhere to go. Pretty
much, kids can sign up as ambassadors for a Sit With Us club and agree to post
open lunches so that anyone who has the app and has nowhere to go can find a
table and, hopefully, make some new friends.
Now,
it seems like the kind of kid who would do that would be the kind of person you
could walk up to and say, "Hey, can I sit with you?" So why have an
app? Why not the low-tech version, which is just ask to sit down?
Because the way it was at my old school, I tried many times to
reach out to someone, but I was rejected many times. And you feel like you're
labeling yourself as an outcast when you ask to join a table with someone you
don't know. This way, it's very private. It's through the phone. No one else
has to know. And you know that you're not going to be rejected once you get to
the table.
So
your app launched [last] week. Have you had a chance to see the app in action
just yet?
So far, the results have been very, very positive. I had my
first club meeting the other day, and everyone was very excited. And people are
already posting open lunches at my school. So I'm very excited that things are
already kicking off with a great start.
Be
The Change: How many kindness-encouraging apps do you have on your device?
There are plenty out there. Consider downloading one if you haven't already.
Sourced From www.dailygood.org