Sunday, August 7, 2022

The Hidden Power Of Siblings | Siblings' Influence, Family Relationships, Sibling Dynamics | Articles For All World | Tajamal

In the intricate web of family dynamics, siblings often occupy a unique and powerful place. They are our first companions in life, our confidants, and sometimes, our greatest challengers. But beyond the day-to-day squabbles and shared secrets lies a profound connection that shapes our individuality and influences our personal growth. Join me, Tajamal, on a journey to uncover 'The Hidden Power of Siblings.' In this exploration, we'll delve into the profound impact that the sibling relationship has on our lives, from childhood to adulthood. Through stories, insights, and expert perspectives, we'll unravel the layers of this powerful bond and discover how it molds our personalities, influences our relationships, and holds the potential for deep, lasting connections.

  I'm going to ask you to engage or re-engage with some of the most important people in your lives your brothers and sisters.it can be a profoundly life-affirming thing to do, even if it isn't always easy.Elliot was a man for whom things were difficult. He was drunk. Most of his life was spent battling against alcoholism, depression, morphine addiction and his life ended up at the age of thirty four.

 Roosevelt was the main cause to make his life harder. And he could never quite get past the comparisons with his big brother Teddy for whom things always seem to come a little bit easier. It wasn't easy being Bobby, either. He was also the brother of a Roosevelt. But he adored his brother Jack. He worked for him side by side helped him too. When Jack died, he bled for him too.

 In the years that followed, Bobby would smile, but it seemed toiled. He'd lose himself at his work, but it seemed tortured. Bobby's own death, so similar to John’s, seems somehow fitting. John Kennedy was deprived of his teen age. Bobby perceived almost to have been relieved of his. There may be no relationship that affects us more deeply, that's closer, finer, harder, sweeter, happier, sadder, more filled with joy or fraught with wow than the relationship we have with our brothers and sisters.

 There is power in the sibling bond. There is pageantry. There is petulance too. As when Neil Bush, sibling of both a president and a governor, famously griped "I've lost patience for being compared to my older brothers. As if Jed and George W. Bush were somehow responsible for the savings and loan scandal and the messy divorce that marked Neil in the public eye. But more important than all of these things, the sibling bond can be a thing of abiding love. Our parents leave us too early, our spouse and our children come along too late. Our siblings are the only ones who are with us for the entire ride. Over the arc of decades, there maybe nothing that defines us and informs us more powerfully than our relationships with our sisters and brothers. It was true for me, it's true for your children and if you have siblings it's true for you, too.

The hidden power of siblings.

I opened a new book, The Sibling Effect, on a Saturday morning, not long before a picture was taken. When the three older brothers decided that it might be a very good idea to lock the younger brother in a fuse cabinet in our playroom. We were, believe it or not, trying to keep him safe. Our father was a hot-headed man, somebody who didn't take kindly to being disturbed on Saturday mornings, i don't know what he thought his life would be like on Saturday mornings .when he had four sons, ages four years older younger when the youngest one was born but they weren't quiet.

He did not take to that well. And he would react to being disturbed on a Saturday morning by stalking into the playroom and administer in a very freewheeling form of a corporal punishment, lashing out at whoever was within his arms' reach.

We were by no means battered children but we did get hit and we found it terrifying. So we devised this sort of scattering high drill. As soon as we saw or heard the footsteps coming Steve the oldest would wriggle under the couch, I would dive into the closet in the playroom,

Gary would dive into a window seat toy chest,

But not before we closed Bruce inside the fuse box.

We told him it was Alan Sheppard space capsule,

And that somehow made it work better.

 I dare say my father was never fooled by this rules.

And it was only in later years that I began to think

"Perhaps it wasn't a good idea to squeeze a four year old up against a panel of old style unscrewed high voltage fuses."

But my brothers and I, even though those unhappy times came through them, with something that was clear and hard and fine. A primal appreciation for the bond we shared. We were a unit; a loud, messy brawling, loyal, loving, lasting unit. We felt much stronger that way than we ever could as individuals. And we knew that as our lives went on we could always be able to call on that strength. We're not alone. Until 15 years ago, scientists didn't really pay much attention to the sibling bond. And with good reason; you have just one mother, you have just one father if you do marriage right, you have one spouse for life.

Siblings can claim none of that uniqueness.

They're interchangeable, fungible, a kind of household commodity. Parents set up shop and begin stocking their shelves with inventory. The only limitation would be in sperm, egg and economics. As long as you can keep breathing, you may as well keep stocking.

Now, nature is perfectly happy with that arrangement because our primal directive here is to get as many as your genes as possible into the next generation.

Animals wrestle with these same issues, too.

But they have a more straight-forward way of dealing with things. A crested penguin that has laid two eggs will take a good look at them and boot the smaller one out of the nest. The better to focus her attentions on a presumably hardier check in the bigger shell.

A black eagle will allow all of her chicks to hatch

and then stand back while the bigger ones fight it out with the little ones typically ripping them to ribbons and then settling back to grow up in peace.

Piglets, cute as they are, are born with a strange little outward set of pointing teeth that they use to jab at one another as they compete for the choices for the nursing spots.

The problem for scientists was that this whole idea of siblings as second class citizens never really seemed to hold up. After the researchers had learned all they could from the relationships in the family, mothers and other relationships, they still came up with some temperamental dark matter. It was pulling at us. Exerting gravity on its own. And that could only be our siblings. Humans are no different from animals.

After we are born we do whatever we can to attract the attention of our parents determining what our strongest selling points are and marketing them ferociously.Someone's the funny one, someone's the pretty one, someone's the athlete, and someones the smart one. Scientists call this "De-identification”. If my older brother is a high-school football player which if you saw my older brother you'd know he was not, I could become a high school football player, too and get at most 50 percent of the applause in my family for doing that. Or, I could become student council president or specialize in the arts and get a 100 percent of the attention in that area. Sometimes parents contaminate the De-identification process, communicating to their kids subtly or not, that only certain kinds of accomplishments would be applauded in the home. Joe Kennedy was famous for this making it clear to his nine children that they were expected to compete with one another in athletics and were expected to win, lest they'd be made to eat in the kitchen with the help rather than in the dining room with the family.

It's no wonder that scrawny second born Jack Kennedy fought so hard to compete with his fitter first born Brother Joe often at his peril. At one point engaging in a bicycle race around the house that resulted in a collision costing John 28 stitches. Joe walked away essentially unharmed.

Parents exacerbate this problem further when they exhibit favoritism which they do overwhelmingly, no matter how much they admit it.

A study I site in this Time Magazine, covering in the book The Sibling Effect, found 70 percent of fathers and 65 percent of mother’s exhibit a preference for at least one child. And keep in mind here the keyword is exhibit.

The remaining parents may simply be doing a better job of concealing things. I'd like to say that 95 percent of all parents have a favorite; five percent are lying about it.

The exception is my wife and me; honestly we do not have a favorite. It's not parents' fault that they harbor feelings of favoritism. And here, too, our natural wiring is at work.

Firstborns are the first products on the familial assembly line. Parents typically get two years of investing dollars, calories and so many other resources in them so that by the time the second born comes along the first born is already, it's what corporations call, sunk costs, you don't want to dis invest in this one, and launch the RND on the new product.  So what we begin to do is say "I'm going to lean to the Mac OS 10 and let the Mac OS 11, come out in a couple of years." So we tend to lean in that direction, but there are other forces at work, too.

One of the same studies I looked at here, both here and in the book, found that improbably the most common favorite for a father is the last born daughter, the most common favorite for a mother is the first born son.

Now this isn't Oedipal, never mind what the Freudian would have told us a hundred years ago, and it's not just that fathers are habitually wrapped around the fingers of their little girls, though I can tell you that, as the father of two girls that part definitely plays a role.

Rather, there is a certain reproductive narcissism at work.

Your opposite gender kids can never resemble you exactly. But if somehow they can resemble you temperamentally you love them all the more. As the result, the father who is a businessman will just melt at the idea of his MBA daughter with the toughest nails worldview.

The mother who is a sensitive type will go gooey over her son the poet. Birth order, another topic I covered for Time and another topic I cover in the book plays out in other ways as well. Long before scientists began looking at these parents noticed that there's certain temperamental templates associated with all birth rankings. The serious, striving first born, the caught-in-a-thicket middle born, the wild child of a last born.

And once again when scientists did crack this field they found out mom and dad are right.

First born across history have tended to be bigger and healthier than later born; in part because of the head start they got on food in an area which it could be scarce.

First born are also vaccinated more reliably and tend to have more follow up visits to doctors when they get sick. And this pattern continues today.

This IQ question is, sadly -- I can say this as a second born -- a very real thing, first born have a three point IQ advantage over second born and second born have a 1.5 IQ advantage over later born, partly because of the exclusive attention first born get from mom and dad, and partly because they get a chance to mentor their younger kids. All of this explains why first born are likelier to be CEOs, they are likelier to be senators, they are likelier to be astronauts and they are likelier to be earn more than other kids are. Last born come into the world with a whole different set of challenges. The smallest and weakest cubs in the den, they’re at the greatest risk of getting eaten alive, so they have to develop what are called low power skills.

The ability to charm and disarm to intuit what's going on in someone else's head, the better to duck the punch before it lands. They are also flat out funnier which is another thing that comes in handy because a person who's making you laugh is a very hard person to slug. It's perhaps no coincidence that over the course of history some of our greatest satirists:

Swift,

Twain,

Voltaire,

Colbert

are either the last born or among the last in very large families. Most middle born don't get quite a sweet a deal. I think of us as the flyover states. We are the ones who fight harder for recognition in the home. We're the ones who are always raising our hands while someone else at the table is getting called on. We’re the ones who tend to take a little longer to find their direction in life. And there can be self-esteem issues associated with that. now, withstanding the fact that I've been asked to do discussion so I feel much better about these things right now but the upside for middle born is that they also tend to develop denser and richer relationships outside the home but that advantage comes also from something a bit disadvantaged simply because their needs weren't met as well in the home.

The feuds in the playroom that play out over favoritism, birth order and so many other issues are as unrelenting as they seem. In one study i cite in the book, children in the two to four age group engage in one fight every 6.3 minutes or 9.5 fights an hour. That's not fighting, that's performance art. That's extraordinary. One reason for this is that there are a lot more people in your home than you think there are or at least a lot more relationships.

Every person in your house has a discreet one-on-one relationship with every other person and those pairings or dyads add up fast. In a family with two parents and two kids there are six dyads. Mum has a relationship with child A and B, dad has a relationship with child A and B.

There's the marital relationship and there is the relationship between the kids themselves.

The formula for this looks very chilly but it's real.

K equals the number of people in your household

and X equals the number of dyads.

In a five-person-family there are ten discreet dyads.

The eight-person Brady Bunch, never mind the sweetness here, there were 28 dyads in that family.

The original Kennedy family with nine kids had 55 different relationships.

And Bobby Kennedy who grew up to have 11 children of his own had a household with a whopping 91 dyads.

This overpopulation of relationships makes fights unavoidable. And far and away the biggest trigger for all sibling fights is property.

Studies have found that over 95 percent of the fights among small children concern somebody touching, playing with, and looking at the other person's stuff.

This in its own way is healthy if it's very noisy, and the reason is that small children come into the world with absolutely no control. They are utterly helpless.

The only way they have of projecting their very limited power is through the objects they can call their own.

When somebody crosses that very erasable line they're going to go nuts, and that's what happens.

Another very common cause bell among children is the idea of fairness. As any parent who hears 14 times a day: "But that's unfair", can tell you. In a way this is good too though. Kids are born with a very innate sense of right and wrong, of a fair deal versus an unfair one and this teaches them powerful lessons. You want to know how powerfully encoded fairness is in the human genome?

We process that phenomenon and through the same lobe in our brain that processes disgust, meaning we react to the idea of somebody being cheated the same way we react to putrefied meat.

Any wonder that this fellow Bernie Mad off is unpopular.

All of these dramas played out day to day,

Moment to moment serve as a real time, total immersion exercise for life.

Siblings teach each other conflict avoidance and conflict resolution, when to stand up for themselves, when to stand down, they learn love, loyalty, honesty, sharing, caring, compromise, the disclosure of secrets and much more important, the keeping of confidences.

I listen to my young daughters -- aren’t they adorable? --

I listen to my young daughters talking late into the night.

The same way my parents no doubt listened to my brothers and me talking, and sometimes I intervene, but usually I don't. They're part of a conversation I am not part of, nobody else in the world is part of, and it's a conversation that can and should go on for the rest of their lives. From this will come a sense of constancy a sense of having a permanent traveling companion, somebody with whom they road tested life before they ever had to get out and travel it on their own.

Brothers and sisters aren't the sine qua non of a happy life; plenty of adult sibling relationships are fatally broken and need to be abandoned for the sanity of everybody involved. And only children throughout history have shown themselves to be creatively, brilliantly capable of getting their socialization and comradeship skill through friends, through cousins, through classmates.

But having siblings and not making the most of those bonds is I believe fall of the first order. If relationships are broken and are fixable, fix them. If they work make them even better. Failing to do so, is a little like having a thousand acres of fertile farmland and never planting it.

Yes, you can always get your food at the supermarket but think what you're allowing to lie fallow.Life is short, it's finite, and it plays for keeps.Siblings maybe among the richest harvests of the time we have here.

Thank you. 

 

 





 

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