Jeffrey Kluger: The sibling bond
A senior editor of science and technology reporting at TIME magazine, Jeffrey Kluger has written books on a wide range of science subjects, including the Polio vaccine, Apollo 13 and the effect of sibling relationships. Full bio
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to change my life in one small way,
the opening of my speech.
to engage or re-engage
people in your lives:
life-affirming thing to do,
battling alcoholism,
when he was just 34 years old.
is that his last name was Roosevelt.
get past the comparisons
to come a little bit easier.
Bobby would smile,
to have been relieved of his.
that effects us more profoundly,
with our brothers and sisters.
and a governor, famously griped,
to my older brothers,"
were somehow responsible
and the messy divorce
than all of these things,
a thing of abiding love.
come along too late.
who are with us
there may be nothing
more powerfully
with our sisters and brothers.
it's true for you, too.
on the left, was eight years old.
and my brother Bruce was four.
that it might be a very good idea
in a fuse cabinet in our playroom.
trying to keep him safe.
to being disturbed on Saturday mornings.
would be like on Saturday mornings
when the youngest one was born,
disturbed on a Saturday morning
form of a corporal punishment,
was within arms' reach.
but we did get hit,
scatter-and-hide drill.
the footsteps coming,
under the couch,
in the playroom,
a window-seat toy chest,
Bruce inside the fuse box.
Alan Shepard's space capsule,
fooled by this ruse.
years that I began to think
to squeeze a four-year-old
un-screwable high-voltage fuses.
even through those unhappy times,
that was clear and hard and fine:
for the bond we shared.
than we ever could as individuals.
to call on that strength.
attention to the sibling bond.
you have just one father
you have one spouse for life.
none of that uniqueness.
a kind of household commodity.
their shelves with inventory,
egg and economics.
you may as well keep stocking.
with that arrangement,
as possible into the next generation.
these same issues, too,
of dealing with things.
will take a good look at them
on the presumably heartier chick
all of her chicks to hatch
fight it out with the little ones,
to grow up in peace.
little outward set of pointing teeth,
for the choicest nursing spots.
as second-class citizens
had learned all they could
mothers and other relationships,
temperamental dark matter
selling points are
someone's the pretty one,
someone's the smart one.
is a high-school football player --
brother, you'd know he was not --
football player, too
in my family for doing that.
council president
of the attention in that area.
the identification process,
will be applauded in the home.
with one another in athletics
in the kitchen with the help,
with the family.
fought so hard to compete
in a bicycle race around the house
costing John 28 stitches.
no matter how much they admit it.
covering in the book "The Sibling Effect,"
and 65 percent of mothers
for at least one child.
the keyword is "exhibit."
a better job of concealing things.
of all parents have a favorite,
feelings of favoritism.
wiring is at work.
on the familial assembly line.
of investing dollars, calories
the second born comes along,
it's what corporations call "sunk costs,"
"I'm going to lean to the Mac OS X
in a couple of years."
both here and in the book found that,
for a father is the last-born daughter.
for a mother is the firstborn son.
what the Freudians would have told us
are habitually wrapped around
as the father of two girls,
reproductive narcissism at work.
you temperamentally,
who is a businessman will just melt
with a tough-as-nails worldview.
will go gooey over her son the poet.
I covered for TIME,
began looking at this,
certain temperamental templates
did crack this field,
to be bigger and healthier
they got on food
vaccinated more reliably
follow-up visits to doctors
say this as a second-born --
IQ advantage over second borns
advantage over later borns,
firstborns get from mom and dad,
to mentor the younger kids.
are likelier to be CEOs,
than other kids are.
with a whole different set of challenges.
of getting eaten alive,
what are called "low-power skills" --
in someone else's head,
the punch before it lands.
that comes in handy,
is a very hard person to slug.
that over the course of history,
quite as sweet a deal.
for recognition in the home.
raising our hands
is getting called on.
to take a little longer
issues associated with that,
that I've been asked to do TED,
about these things right now.
is that they also tend to develop
outside the home.
from something of a disadvantage,
weren't met as well in the home.
that play out over favoritism,
that's performance art.
a lot more people in your home
a discrete one-on-one relationship
there are six dyads:
between the kids themselves.
looks very chilly but it's real.
in your household,
there are ten discrete dyads.
never mind the sweetness here --
had 55 different relationships.
to have 11 children of his own,
for all sibling fights is property.
of the fights among small children
if it's very noisy,
come into the world
of projecting their very limited power
they can call their own.
that very erasable line,
and that's what happens.
among children is the idea of fairness,
"But that's unfair!"
of right and wrong,
fairness is in the human genome?
that processes disgust,
of somebody being cheated
Bernie Madoff, is unpopular?
total-immersion exercise for life.
avoidance and conflict resolution,
caring, compromise,
and much more important,
aren’t they adorable? --
talking late into the night,
listened to my brothers and me talking,
but usually I don't.
I am not part of,
that can and should go on
traveling companion,
and travel it on their own.
the sine qua non of a happy life;
relationships are fatally broken
for the sanity of everybody involved.
have shown themselves
and comradeship skills
through classmates.
making the most of those bonds
and are fixable, fix them.
a thousand acres of fertile farmland
at the supermarket,
allowing to lie fallow.
and it plays for keeps.
of the time we have here.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jeffrey Kluger - Senior Editor, TIME MagazineA senior editor of science and technology reporting at TIME magazine, Jeffrey Kluger has written books on a wide range of science subjects, including the Polio vaccine, Apollo 13 and the effect of sibling relationships.
Why you should listen
Jeffrey Kluger is a senior editor at TIME magazine, where he has worked since 1996. In 1994, he co-authored Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13, which was the basis for the Tom Hanks film Apollo 13. His book about Jonas Salk and the Polio vaccine, Splendid Solution, was published in 2006. Three years later, he published Simplexity: Why Simple Things Become Complex (and Why Complex Things Can Be Made Simple). His latest book, The Sibling Effect, came out in 2011.
Jeffrey Kluger | Speaker | TED.com