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    parental favoritism

    Explore "parental favoritism" with insightful episodes like "146: Hurt People, Hurt People.." and "The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings" from podcasts like ""Two Hot Takes" and "The Art of Manliness"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    146: Hurt People, Hurt People..

    146: Hurt People, Hurt People..
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    Two Hot Takes host, Morgan, is joined by guest co-host Lauren! It's pretty well known that hurt people tend to also hurt people, and these stories demonstrated that pretty well. Except some may be justifiable in their hurt? You help us judge, but we had some pretty serious reactions to some of these stories.

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    The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings

    The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings

    For most people, their siblings will be the longest-lasting relationships of their lives, potentially enduring all the way from birth until past the death of their parents. 

    Marked by both jealousy and conflict and love and loyalty, siblings are also some of our most complicated relationships. While a little over half of people describe their relationships with their siblings as positive, about one-fifth classify them as negative, and a quarter say their feelings about their siblings are decidedly mixed. 

    Here to take us on a tour of the complex landscape of sibling-dom is Geoffrey Greif, a professor of social work and the co-author of the bookAdult Sibling Relationships. Today on the show, Geoffrey shares how our brothers and sisters shape us and how our relationship with our siblings changes as we move from childhood to old age. We discuss how the perception of parental favoritism affects the closeness of siblings and how a parent's relationship with their own siblings affects the relationship between their children. Geoffrey explains how most sibling relationships are marked by the three A's — affection, ambiguity, and/or ambivalence — and how the relationship can also become very distant or outright severed. We end our conversation with Geoffrey's advice on developing a good relationship between your children and reconnecting with your own siblings.

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