Passage 1
Making Friends in Family
WHEN Joan gave birth to the first boy in her family in three generations, she and her husband were ecstatic. So were her parents. Joan expected her older sister, Sally, to be just as delighted. Joan had always worshiped Sally the beauty and the star of the family and rejoiced in her achievements.
But since the babys arrival, the sisters have become distant. Joan feels hurt that Sally seems completely uninterested in little Andrew. Sally, who had no children, claims that her younger sister acts as if no one ever had a baby
before .
Neither Sally nor Joan understands that the sudden reversal in their family roles is the real cause of the current chill. Joan has finally outdone her dominant older sister and Sally doesnt like it! Their distance may be temporary, but it shows that childhood rivalry isnt always outgrown. It can remain a strong ingredient in sibling relationships throughout life.
In a study at the University of Cincinnati, 65 men and women between ages 25 and 93 were asked how they felt about their brothers and sisters. Nearly 75 percent admitted harboring rivalrous feelings. In a few cases, these emotions were sufficiently intense to have affected their entire lives.
Many adult brothers and sisters are close, supportive and affectionate yet still need to compete. Two brothers I know turn into killers when on opposite sides of a tennis net. Off the court, they are the best of friends. My own younger sister never fails to tell me when Ive put on weight.. However, shes a terrible cook and that pleases me; I outdo myself when she comes to dinner. Happily, despite these small failings, we have been an important resource for one
another.
In between the intensely rivalrous and the generally supportive siblings lie those who relate in an irritable manner that no friendship should survive. Some brothers and sisters stay at arms length, but always stop short ot ending ties completely. Why do these puzzling, unproductive, often painful relationships
persist?
In part because the bonds forged in childhood remain powerful even after
siblings have grown up and gone their separate ways. These relationships are so intimate that the participants share a closeness unlike any other. But along with the affection contributing to that closeness, there is room for anger, jealousy and resentment.
Stephen Bank, a family therapist and co-author with Michael D. Kahn of The Sibling Bond, explains why: There are few adults who dont believe deep down that a sibling got more of something than they did parental love, advantages, brains, looks. It could be true, but it really doesnt matter. If, as adults, theyre successful enough to feel on an equal footing, siblings can give each other a great deal. If not, unresolved feelings can distort their relationships.
The need for parental love is as instinctive as breathing, and the struggle to keep it all for yourself begins with the birth of a younger sister or brother. According to Bank, when the rivalry between adult siblings achieves neurotic
proportions, it can usually be traced back either to marked parental favoritism or to one siblings conviction that the other is superior.
A study of adult sisters, described in the book Sisters by Elizabeth Fishel, points up how important it is for parents to treat their children even-handedly. Those sisters who reported the best relationships were the ones who said there had been no favoritism, no parental comparisons and no pitting of one child against another.
Social scientists who have studied adult sibling relationships say it is common for them to blow hot and cold. Situations that might be expected to bring them together the birth of a child, the illness or death of a parent are well known for reviving old rivalries.
Instead of uniting in their concern for an ill parent, siblings often quarrel bitterly over who provides the most care, financial support or affection, according to Victor Cicirelli, a Purdue University Psychologist. And probate lawyers say the bitterest quarrels erupt when siblings have to divide a parents personal property.
The break between Jill and Patty might have been closed by now if Jills husband hadnt been so quick to take his wifes side. If spouses want to be constructive when siblings quarrel, they need to remain emotionally neutral, Bank advises. Its a line to be supportive, provided they remember the goal is to help their mates be more objective and not inflame feelings further.
As they get older, many adults say they wish they were on better terms with brothers or sisters. In the next breath, however, they add that its probably impossible. We always get hung up on the same old sore points is a familiar lament .
学校里受欢迎的小孩长大后收入更高
纯粹友谊不存在?男人更爱自作多情
研究:清理桌柜杂物有助事业成功
油炸食品吃一月 损伤类似患肝炎
端午节说说全国各地的特色“粽子”(组图)[1]
英国人爱上蘑菇 一年吃掉12万吨
英国“挂牛头卖马肉”殃及47所学校食堂
【我的中国故事】在阳朔的4年
辩论失利令其信心受挫 新书披露奥巴马质疑时刻
智能手机让人每天加班两小时
小儿难养:英国育儿成本达十年最高峰
我从影视中学到了语文
生活处处有语文给我的启示
丑闻、头条人物成2017万圣节热销面具
有其父必有其子?迈克尔·杰克逊子女生活奢侈随父亲
每日一词∣抗击新冠肺炎疫情的中国实践 Chinas Fight Against COVID
“你真上相!”用英语怎么说?
联合国:世界人口到2025年将达81亿
奥巴马被指谎称生于肯尼亚 只为来美上大学
法国慈善团体欲向穷人发放马肉
生活处处有语文给我的启示
莫迪将加强对华经济合作 边境谈判难有突破
我从影视中学到了语文
英中学瞒家长给女生打针避孕
斯诺登申请避难冰岛
2013年央视春晚节目单(双语)
美研发超音速客机 90分钟纽约飞东京
英学者呼吁改革公民入籍测试
专家:学音乐是浪费钱 无助于提高智力
我从影视中学到了语文
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |