I was never a swot, not interested in good grades, always did well tho and never went out of my way to study.
I found my own reading and learning much moire stimulating, for which reason I was constantly getting into trouble for not paying attention! I was always ahead of the teacher. Except of course, for Maths. Which is a whole other story! And of course, late in life, I end up a Maths teacher, don't I?!
I haven't spent a life traumatized by having been bullied, but I have come to realize, after my 3 score and 10 years, that bullying has affected everything I have ever done in life, but in ways that were not obvious to me.
Cheers!
Yet another similarity in our backgrounds! I found getting good grades without trying very hard easy, as well. And I wasn't paying much attention, because I was doing my homework (for my other classes) in class so I could play hockey (cold half of the year) or baseball or basketball (warm half) after school, and read comics in the evening. I almost never did homework at home. My parents didn't bother me about that, because I always got good grades. I also read well ahead of the teacher, and, like you, of course I enjoyed and learned much more from my outside reading.
I wasn't a schoolteacher for very long, but I WAS an on-call, emergency/substitute teacher in elementary schools for a few years, and also taught art in after school programmes for several years, and got a sense for what the full-time professional school teachers deal with in terms of relating to the kids. I also teach storyboarding seminars in my local and regional libraries (government-sponsored cultural programmes) - so I've gotten to know the difference in dealing with the older children and late teens.
And yes, the the traumatisation of being cruelly picked on can make a person have more empathy and sympathy for the downtrodden, or just his or her fellow human being, and THAT is a really useful tool for a teacher (especially a new one) in being open to gaining a good rapport with his or her students. It helped make me abhor violence and make me a "peacemaker" as a pre-teen and teenager (and on into my adulthood), and try hard to be chummy with the kids, while still keeping their respect in the student-teacher relationship. My "sneaking in" drawing activities related to story writing assignments left by the regular teachers (such as cartoon storyboarding in their pre-writing preparation, or just drawing lessons when there was room in the curriculum when no lesson plan was left, made me popular with the students (and that gave me a great feeling). I found the Dutch and Danish students much more well behaved, and willing to learn than the students I taught in USA. But that was because the students I taught in Los Angeles were inner-city kids from low-income broken homes, from traumatic households living in violent gang-dominated neighbourhoods. And in such schools, having empathy and willingness to aim for understanding without pressing things is an important quality to have.