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"How I laughed at The Times headline yesterday that said, 'siblings are a source of teenage stress.'"

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"How I laughed at The Times headline yesterday that said, 'siblings are a source of teenage stress.'" - Hallo friend WELCOME TO AMERICA, In the article you read this time with the title "How I laughed at The Times headline yesterday that said, 'siblings are a source of teenage stress.'", we have prepared well for this article you read and download the information therein. hopefully fill posts Article AMERICA, Article CULTURAL, Article ECONOMIC, Article POLITICAL, Article SECURITY, Article SOCCER, Article SOCIAL, we write this you can understand. Well, happy reading.

Title : "How I laughed at The Times headline yesterday that said, 'siblings are a source of teenage stress.'"
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"How I laughed at The Times headline yesterday that said, 'siblings are a source of teenage stress.'"

"Apparently, the more siblings you have, the more stress you experience in teenage life because, claimed Professor Douglas Downey of Ohio State University in the Journal of Family Issues, 'siblings are best understood as competitors for resources' and the more of them you have, the worse the effect of this on your mental health. What tosh. I had a sibling in my teenage years (and still have one) and cannot see how she had anything but a positive effect on my mental health. While I was away at boarding school between the ages of 13 and 17, for example, being bullied, cold-showered and rogered senseless by the prefects, she was at home in the bosom of our Cricklewood family, hanging out with my parents and their famous friends.... What do you think I was, jealous or something?... If what these Yankee boffins are postulating is true, such an experience would have turned me into an angry, thwarted, attention-seeking little man....."

Writes Giles Coren, seeking attention in "I’m so lucky my sister never came to anything" (London Times).

Here's the article he's commenting on: "Why siblings are a source of teenage stress/An adolescent with more brothers and sisters is more likely to feel depression, anxiety and low self-esteem."

By the way, I love the word "boffins." It's one of the small set of words I've actually made a tag for. (What are the others? "Garner," of course. But do you know the rest? Do I? The tag-suggester function tells me there are tags for "deeply," "energize," "how," "muster," "performative," and "women." )

Anyway, as for this siblings-as-a-source-of-stress business, of course, siblings can be very annoying and, as I remember, one is especially irritable in the teenage years, but this boffin said the reason for the stress is competition for resources. It seems to me that having siblings accustoms us to not getting everything we want, so we resign ourselves to a modest share. I was just thinking about how much I wanted to take dance lessons when I was a child. I was told no, and it never occurred to me to cry about it or beg. It was enough just to think that to ask more than once would be to risk being considered selfish. 

Other British slang in that Giles Coren quote: "tosh," "rogered." Are these rude words? "Tosh" was originally cricket slang — cricket the sport, not cricket the insect. Someone in 1898, "Among the recent neologisms of the cricket field is 'tosh,' which means bowling of contemptible easiness." These days it means nonsense or twaddle.

"Roger," though, is "coarse slang," in the OED's opinion. It means "to have sexual intercourse with." It's interesting to read the OED's historical quotes:
1711 — I rogered my wife. W. Byrd

1763 — I picked up a little profligate wretch and gave her sixpence... ‘Should not a half-pay officer r-g-r for sixpence?’J. Boswell

1953 — I..sulked all morning over my warm beer as they..rolled rodgering down. D. Thomas
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"Apparently, the more siblings you have, the more stress you experience in teenage life because, claimed Professor Douglas Downey of Ohio State University in the Journal of Family Issues, 'siblings are best understood as competitors for resources' and the more of them you have, the worse the effect of this on your mental health. What tosh. I had a sibling in my teenage years (and still have one) and cannot see how she had anything but a positive effect on my mental health. While I was away at boarding school between the ages of 13 and 17, for example, being bullied, cold-showered and rogered senseless by the prefects, she was at home in the bosom of our Cricklewood family, hanging out with my parents and their famous friends.... What do you think I was, jealous or something?... If what these Yankee boffins are postulating is true, such an experience would have turned me into an angry, thwarted, attention-seeking little man....."

Writes Giles Coren, seeking attention in "I’m so lucky my sister never came to anything" (London Times).

Here's the article he's commenting on: "Why siblings are a source of teenage stress/An adolescent with more brothers and sisters is more likely to feel depression, anxiety and low self-esteem."

By the way, I love the word "boffins." It's one of the small set of words I've actually made a tag for. (What are the others? "Garner," of course. But do you know the rest? Do I? The tag-suggester function tells me there are tags for "deeply," "energize," "how," "muster," "performative," and "women." )

Anyway, as for this siblings-as-a-source-of-stress business, of course, siblings can be very annoying and, as I remember, one is especially irritable in the teenage years, but this boffin said the reason for the stress is competition for resources. It seems to me that having siblings accustoms us to not getting everything we want, so we resign ourselves to a modest share. I was just thinking about how much I wanted to take dance lessons when I was a child. I was told no, and it never occurred to me to cry about it or beg. It was enough just to think that to ask more than once would be to risk being considered selfish. 

Other British slang in that Giles Coren quote: "tosh," "rogered." Are these rude words? "Tosh" was originally cricket slang — cricket the sport, not cricket the insect. Someone in 1898, "Among the recent neologisms of the cricket field is 'tosh,' which means bowling of contemptible easiness." These days it means nonsense or twaddle.

"Roger," though, is "coarse slang," in the OED's opinion. It means "to have sexual intercourse with." It's interesting to read the OED's historical quotes:
1711 — I rogered my wife. W. Byrd

1763 — I picked up a little profligate wretch and gave her sixpence... ‘Should not a half-pay officer r-g-r for sixpence?’J. Boswell

1953 — I..sulked all morning over my warm beer as they..rolled rodgering down. D. Thomas


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