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My Bully Tries To Corrupt My Mother Yuna Introv Work -

The silence that followed was worse than any punch.

She kept her word. She reported Kael to the school, to the parents’ association, and—when she discovered he had done similar things to two other kids—to a juvenile counselor. Kael switched schools by the end of the semester.

This is where it turned evil. Kael began “confiding” in my mother about his tragic past—a fictional story about a former friend who bullied him relentlessly. The details were mine. My weaknesses, my fears, my private struggles I had once told Kael in a moment of forced vulnerability behind the gym. my bully tries to corrupt my mother yuna introv work

One night, I overheard her on the phone with her sister. “Kael is such a gentleman. He understands me. My own son won’t even tell me what’s wrong anymore.”

It started with a laugh. Not the loud, obnoxious kind you hear in a crowded cafeteria, but a soft, knowing giggle from the kitchen. I froze at the top of the stairs. That was my mother’s laugh—Yuna Introv, the woman who hadn’t genuinely laughed since my father left three years ago. And she wasn’t alone. The silence that followed was worse than any punch

Kael left. For the first time in five years, he looked afraid. That night, my mother held me while I cried. She didn’t apologize much—Yuna expresses regret through action, not words. But she did say one thing I’ll never forget:

But I couldn’t say that. Because Kael had already told her his version: that I was the bully. That I was jealous of his popularity. That my “emotional outbursts” were the real problem. Kael’s strategy was textbook gaslighting, but applied to a mother-son relationship. It unfolded in three phases. Kael switched schools by the end of the semester

I lost it. Not with violence—I’m not that stupid. But I walked to the kitchen, pulled out my phone, and played the recording.

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