Quantcast
Channel: The Kitty City Gazette
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 25

Godzilla Admits He Was A Victim Of Bullying As A Young Reptile

$
0
0

Edmonds, WA

In an exclusive interview today Godzilla told the Kitty City Gazette he was bullied as a young reptile.

Long before he crushed cars, buildings and countless Japanese people to death, Godzilla, a 56-year-old Giant Daikaiju Monster, said he was “viciously teased” by classmates who mocked his shyness, short arms and the strange way he walked.

Godzilla, who has admitted to eating children in the past, said he threw his very first punch at the age of just 16 when a Pug dog took one of his beloved Barbie dolls and threw it in his face and that the bullying spread from there until he became a neighborhood target.


Pugs, so often the victims of acts of bullying and embarrassment themselves, are well-known for their acts of bullying others

Godzilla said one afternoon a bunch of school-age cats ridiculed him for looking like a cross between a giant gorilla and a fat whale. “I just lost it and started eating train cars,” he said, “and from that moment on violence became my answer to violence.”

Godzilla’s mother Linda, who is a telemarketer by trade, said the attacks and bullying gradually became so bad she feared for his safety every time he left their cave. "I worried about what it was doing to his head,“ she said, “he was so much bigger than the other kids, what if he got mad and lashed out?"

Linda stated she hopes now her son’s attempt to come to terms with his past will help young people and monsters today who may be victims themselves.


“I just lost it and started eating train cars,” Godzilla said

“(The bullying) made me so angry,“ said Godzilla. “And for years I took it out on others, often violently.”

Godzilla said the kids would trip him, pin him down and pour dog food in his mouth and kick him between the legs calling him names like “gimp” and “retard.”

Experts agree the experience of being bullied can end up causing lasting psychological damage to victims. This is self-evident in Godzilla’s case where his anger and frustration culminated in the mass destruction of cars, buildings, cities and a sports arena in his search for catharsis.


Experts agree bullying often leads to more bullying behavior

These days Godzilla lives with his mother and said he has no more problems with his self-esteem. He said he feels he is “finally mentally strong and centered” and boasted he is able to survive in deep water for indefinite periods of time and is adept at ping-pong and yoga.

He and his mother hope to travel the rest of the Pacific Northwest and discuss reasons why bullying only leads to further and sometimes much more violent bullying.

Copyright The Kitty City Gazette

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 25

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images