Sibling differences
Moderator: CameronBornAndBred
Sibling differences
I know we've already had a conversation like this, but sometimes I think we just dump too much into the LTE.
My brother is currently in the shower, preparing to head to his church for Wednesday night fellowship. My first thought was of thankfulness and relief, because not having him around will help me to get the rest of what I need to do today done in as stress-free a manner as possible. My brother is by far the more organized, methodical one between us, and he's one to power through stuff and finish ASAP, completely stressing himself (and everyone around him) out in the process. I, on the other hand, like to take my time as much as possible, and I tend to approach things with far less furrowed a brow, as it were. With him gone for several hours, I can do things my way while also doing my best to make this as organized as I can (when it comes to organization, I have a legitimate problem...not diagnosed or anything, but I am and always have been incapable of staying very organized without considerable help and/or, ahem, cajoling).
Do y'all know what I'm getting at?
My brother is currently in the shower, preparing to head to his church for Wednesday night fellowship. My first thought was of thankfulness and relief, because not having him around will help me to get the rest of what I need to do today done in as stress-free a manner as possible. My brother is by far the more organized, methodical one between us, and he's one to power through stuff and finish ASAP, completely stressing himself (and everyone around him) out in the process. I, on the other hand, like to take my time as much as possible, and I tend to approach things with far less furrowed a brow, as it were. With him gone for several hours, I can do things my way while also doing my best to make this as organized as I can (when it comes to organization, I have a legitimate problem...not diagnosed or anything, but I am and always have been incapable of staying very organized without considerable help and/or, ahem, cajoling).
Do y'all know what I'm getting at?
- cl15876
- PWing School Endowed Professor
- Posts: 5505
- Joined: April 8th, 2009, 7:04 pm
- Location: Dumfries, VA
- Contact:
Re: Sibling differences
You hate to be nagged about something you know you should be doing but you need to process it and do it in your time and you are a procrastinator? Am I close?wilson wrote:I know we've already had a conversation like this, but sometimes I think we just dump too much into the LTE.
My brother is currently in the shower, preparing to head to his church for Wednesday night fellowship. My first thought was of thankfulness and relief, because not having him around will help me to get the rest of what I need to do today done in as stress-free a manner as possible. My brother is by far the more organized, methodical one between us, and he's one to power through stuff and finish ASAP, completely stressing himself (and everyone around him) out in the process. I, on the other hand, like to take my time as much as possible, and I tend to approach things with far less furrowed a brow, as it were. With him gone for several hours, I can do things my way while also doing my best to make this as organized as I can (when it comes to organization, I have a legitimate problem...not diagnosed or anything, but I am and always have been incapable of staying very organized without considerable help and/or, ahem, cajoling).
Do y'all know what I'm getting at?
- DukieInKansas
- PWing School Endowed Professor
- Posts: 6611
- Joined: May 3rd, 2009, 11:48 pm
- Location: Kansas - scientist's say it's flatter than a pancake - cross it on a bicycle and you won't agree.
Re: Sibling differences
Sibling differencs are always interesting. The three sisters have always said that when we get old, we will probably end up living together. We each have our strengths and weaknesses and figure when we combine ourselves, we will be much better off.
Life is good!
Re: Sibling differences
Pretty darned close. My brother just left the house, but not before offering a series of "suggestions."cl15876 wrote:You hate to be nagged about something you know you should be doing but you need to process it and do it in your time and you are a procrastinator? Am I close?
- captmojo
- PWing School Endowed Professor
- Posts: 5096
- Joined: April 12th, 2009, 12:20 pm
- Location: It's lonely out in space on such a timeless flight.
Re: Sibling differences
I breathe. My brother does not.
I could continue with similar comparisons but...no.
I could continue with similar comparisons but...no.
"Backboards? Backboards? I'll show'em what to do with a f%#kin' backboard!"
- cl15876
- PWing School Endowed Professor
- Posts: 5505
- Joined: April 8th, 2009, 7:04 pm
- Location: Dumfries, VA
- Contact:
Re: Sibling differences
I can relate, brother! I have a sister who loves to tell me what I should be doing!!!! but I still love her when I know she knows how to read between the lines!!! and then she still loves me!!!wilson wrote:Pretty darned close. My brother just left the house, but not before offering a series of "suggestions."cl15876 wrote:You hate to be nagged about something you know you should be doing but you need to process it and do it in your time and you are a procrastinator? Am I close?
Re: Sibling differences
Every time my brother does this, he prefaces his statement(s) with "May I make a suggestion?", followed by his not-so-subtly snide way of indicating that he believes his manner of doing things to be vastly superior to mine.cl15876 wrote: I can relate, brother! I have a sister who loves to tell me what I should be doing!!!! but I still love her when I know she knows how to read between the lines!!! and then she still loves me!!!
I'm always tempted to respond with, "May I make an observation?...I'm a grown ass man."
- Turk
- Part Time Student at PWing school
- Posts: 490
- Joined: June 18th, 2009, 8:40 am
- Location: Michigan Avenue
Re: Sibling differences
I would be interested in studies on birth order's impact on personality. In the assorted Turk clans and those of many friends, the oldest child tends to be mature, responsible, and emulates the parents in many ways. The next child needs to get out of the shadow of the first, and so branches out into different areas of interest or behavior, often pushing the edge of the behavioral envelope to uncomfortable limits. The youngest child (of 3 or more) winds up being completely unsupervised and could get away with murder, most likely because the parents have either given up or or have learned to dial back on the hovering.
"The idea is that you are better today than you were yesterday."
Re: Sibling differences
We've made similar observations, but expressed them differently. I'm the more contemplative, cerebral one, while my brother is more gruff and "typically male" in his social, emotional, etc. carriage. No idea what that means. We do get asked pretty regularly, though, how much older I am. I couldn't care less, but it drives him up the wall.Turk wrote:I would be interested in studies on birth order's impact on personality. In the assorted Turk clans and those of many friends, the oldest child tends to be mature, responsible, and emulates the parents in many ways. The next child needs to get out of the shadow of the first, and so branches out into different areas of interest or behavior, often pushing the edge of the behavioral envelope to uncomfortable limits. The youngest child (of 3 or more) winds up being completely unsupervised and could get away with murder, most likely because the parents have either given up or or have learned to dial back on the hovering.
- Sue71
- Graduate Student at PWing school
- Posts: 1108
- Joined: April 9th, 2009, 1:39 am
- Location: Viva Las Vegas
Re: Sibling differences
Um, so I haven't posted much lately, but did you mean to hyphenate that so it reads a little, um differently? As in, grown-ass man?wilson wrote:Every time my brother does this, he prefaces his statement(s) with "May I make a suggestion?", followed by his not-so-subtly snide way of indicating that he believes his manner of doing things to be vastly superior to mine.cl15876 wrote: I can relate, brother! I have a sister who loves to tell me what I should be doing!!!! but I still love her when I know she knows how to read between the lines!!! and then she still loves me!!!
I'm always tempted to respond with, "May I make an observation?...I'm a grown ass man."
You don't walk the plank in NJ. You just disappear. Forever.
Re: Sibling differences
Well, I'm really more of a...well, nevermind. ;)Sue71 wrote:Um, so I haven't posted much lately, but did you mean to hyphenate that so it reads a little, um differently? As in, grown-ass man?wilson wrote:Every time my brother does this, he prefaces his statement(s) with "May I make a suggestion?", followed by his not-so-subtly snide way of indicating that he believes his manner of doing things to be vastly superior to mine.cl15876 wrote: I can relate, brother! I have a sister who loves to tell me what I should be doing!!!! but I still love her when I know she knows how to read between the lines!!! and then she still loves me!!!
I'm always tempted to respond with, "May I make an observation?...I'm a grown ass man."
Perhaps I should have hyphenated. But yes, I am a grown-ass man, and not so much of a grown [pause] ass man.
- CathyCA
- PWing School Chancellor
- Posts: 11483
- Joined: April 8th, 2009, 9:38 pm
- Location: Greenville, North Carolina
Re: Sibling differences
Do you know me and my 2 brothers?Turk wrote:I would be interested in studies on birth order's impact on personality. In the assorted Turk clans and those of many friends, the oldest child tends to be mature, responsible, and emulates the parents in many ways. The next child needs to get out of the shadow of the first, and so branches out into different areas of interest or behavior, often pushing the edge of the behavioral envelope to uncomfortable limits. The youngest child (of 3 or more) winds up being completely unsupervised and could get away with murder, most likely because the parents have either given up or or have learned to dial back on the hovering.
I'm the oldest--the mature, responsible one. The middle child is the one who always tried to get attention--look at me, he was always saying, and thus he became the politician, becoming the president of the student body of every school he ever attended. The youngest got away with all kinds of bad behavior--presumably because our parents were watching me, thinking that I was the one getting in to trouble. The youngest STILL gets away with bad behavior.
“The invention of basketball was not an accident. It was developed to meet a need. Those boys simply would not play 'Drop the Handkerchief.'”
~ James Naismith
~ James Naismith
- YmoBeThere
- PWing School Endowed Professor
- Posts: 6912
- Joined: April 13th, 2009, 7:36 pm
- Location: South Central...Tejas
Re: Sibling differences
My sister and I are very different. For example, she's not nearly the PW I am.
- devildeac
- PWing School Chancellor
- Posts: 18962
- Joined: April 8th, 2009, 11:10 pm
- Location: Nowhere near the hell in which unc finds itself.
Re: Sibling differences
Invite her to join us here, we'll teach her proper PWing...YmoBeThere wrote:My sister and I are very different. For example, she's not nearly the PW I am.
[redacted] them and the horses they rode in on.
- Turk
- Part Time Student at PWing school
- Posts: 490
- Joined: June 18th, 2009, 8:40 am
- Location: Michigan Avenue
Re: Sibling differences
I bet you can find more examples. Here's a story from way back in the day. As the eldest, I was first to fly the roost and try to make my way in the world. One day, I called home to check in. Little Sister Turk was still in high school, and I learn that she stayed out so late on Saturday night that she came home AFTER Mama and Papa Turk left for church on Sunday morning. So I asked Papa Turk, "You killed her, right? When's the funeral? I guess I'll need to get time off from work." And Papa Turk said something like, "Oh, she was out with her friends. We knew where she was." And I held the phone away from my ear to give my head more room to explode. To this day, I am convinced that if I had the huevos to pull such a stunt, I would have been chopped up into pieces and fed to the catfish in the Mon, Allegheny, and Ohio rivers (and probably the Yough too for good measure)....CathyCA wrote:Do you know me and my 2 brothers?
I'm the oldest--the mature, responsible one. The middle child is the one who always tried to get attention--look at me, he was always saying, and thus he became the politician, becoming the president of the student body of every school he ever attended. The youngest got away with all kinds of bad behavior--presumably because our parents were watching me, thinking that I was the one getting in to trouble. The youngest STILL gets away with bad behavior.
"The idea is that you are better today than you were yesterday."
- DevilAlumna
- Graduate Student at PWing school
- Posts: 1300
- Joined: April 10th, 2009, 12:13 am
- Location: Woodinville, Wa
Re: Sibling differences
I'm the 2nd/youngest of two, but for the longest time, I was by far the more responsible, mature one. My bro was such a general screw-up through high school and 8 years afterwards, that I could pretty much do ANYTHING I wanted, and it would still be tame in comparison. That said, i was just a pretty easy-going kid, so I never really pushed any boundaries. I saw what happened when you screwed up, and I didn't want any of it.
Well, I went a bit crazy in college, but by then, I was technically an adult, and my parents were halfway around the world.
Well, I went a bit crazy in college, but by then, I was technically an adult, and my parents were halfway around the world.
- Turk
- Part Time Student at PWing school
- Posts: 490
- Joined: June 18th, 2009, 8:40 am
- Location: Michigan Avenue
Re: Sibling differences
DA, perhaps an indirect proof, no? Your big bro set the direction, and you figured out "I need to go the other way."
"The idea is that you are better today than you were yesterday."
- Bostondevil
- Graduate Student at PWing school
- Posts: 1491
- Joined: April 9th, 2009, 9:43 am
- Location: Massachusetts, duh.
Re: Sibling differences
I'm a very responsible middle-child. The middle child tendancy I express in spades is diplomacy. I'm the daughter of two oldest children and I married and oldest child, I get bossed around a lot. And by a lot, I mean A LOT! Being the only daughter changes some of the dynamic. I've read the book too. The reason I display some oldest child traits is probably because I'm the first (and only) girl. My mother focused on me while my father focused on my older brother. My younger brother could have gotten away with murder but he didn't want too.
The time is out of joint, O cursed spite!
Re: Sibling differences
Yah, well, it's all fun and games until you interject the spouses of siblings into the mix....then it kind of blows all to hellandgone.