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Conversation | 05/13/2008 8:46 am

Marie Brenner's Advice for Estranged Siblings: Make the Call, Get on a Plane, Just Go

Editor’s Note: Marie Brenner, author of Apples and Oranges: My Brother and Me, Lost and Found, is also contributing editor at Vanity Fair, author of Great Dames: What I Learned from Older Women and a close friend.

 

LESLEY: You’ve written a powerful, emotional book, Apples and Oranges, about what it’s like when you don’t get along with your sibling. There’s guilt, there’s longing … and almost uncontrolled anger. First off, tell us why you and your older brother Carl, your only sibling, were at odds.

MARIE: That’s a mystery. And it’s the mystery of so many brothers and sisters. A subject that for some reason is rarely talked about. How do two children grow up so close in a family and then become foreigners in adult life?

There were the obvious differences from childhood. I was the younger sister playing my Joan Baez records to annoy him and he was probably the only one in our elementary school who was a Republican at 10. He was also an early member of the National Rifle Association!

So, we fought all the time. Our mother called us apples and oranges. We were different.

LESLEY: As I recall from the book, he was “red state” to your “blue state,” you the NYC sophisticate. You disagreed on religion too. All the hot spots. Did you agree on anything?

MARIE: At first, I thought absolutely nothing. I was wrong. I thought we were polar opposites. I was wrong about that too. He was a control freak, an obsessive, who would take a look at my messy desk and say, “How can you ever get anything done?” He posted signs up: A Failure to Plan is a Plan to Fail. When he was young he used to polish his shoes and line up his shirts just so. And secretive? Let’s not go there.

I was the noisy younger sister. When we would get into battles over politics, he would lose it and say, “You and your friends, the New York libs.” I mean, really.

LESLEY: I always thought sibling relationships were far more formative and important in how we develop than anyone talks about. The book is both a riveting story, and an examination of sibling rivalries that never stop. You went to conferences, interviewed experts. What did you learn about the brother/sister or sister/sister wars?

MARIE: I learned a lot. A recent study suggests that our relationships with our brothers and sisters is the dark matter that defines us. For years, psychiatrists and family therapists more or less ignored this. Imagine that.

By age ll, you’ve spent more time with your siblings than your parents or friends. Forty percent of us have relationships with our siblings that are distant and/or infuriating. Many of us are like moose with our antlers locked together.

There is no question that the closer you are with your siblings the more you feel content in your life. There are studies about that too. So, for me, the question that became my obsession was: How to make this better? How to reframe?

LESLEY: Before I ask you specifically about you and Carl, I’ve heard you talk about Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama as siblings. Explain that.

MARIE: This fascinates me. Think of this as the iceberg of all sibling relationships. That is a term therapists use. Icebergs. Many of us have them. I wonder, watching Hillary and Obama as they battle each other, whether they are trying to cope with their own sibling issues. Are there icebergs here?

Hillary is a classic firstborn, bossy and determined. She had two bratty younger brothers she both protected and stomped on. She still does with Tony and Hugh. Those smarmy presidential pardons, what was that about except sibling stuff? Is that connected to Hillary and the piece of her with Bill Clinton that reminds many of Bonnie and Clyde? Look at that gleam in her eye when she debates Obama. It is like she’s in a big-sister devil cult, swatting a swarming fly.

And then there’s Obama. He was raised more or less like a golden-child-only prince. Yes, he has siblings, halves and steps, but they are much younger — or older. And a continent away. He had siblings on demand. This gives him lots of confidence, but he is not so good at the parry and thrust and wit you get in the sibling romper room. In this way, he is no JFK.

93 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Mugsy Peabody
No guns? Do you have room for me up there?
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/14/2008 12:21 am
Star Lawrence
I have been afraid of my sibling, too…
By Star Lawrence on 05/14/2008 11:41 am
Deni G
amazing, no? here you have this perfectly wonderful piece and smack in the middle of it…this ridiculous political question. But you know, it is so easy, to get caught up, I immediately responded to it, with my two cents. I am going to make a concerted effort to refuse to be manipulated by the founders. I am not going to post in regards to these baited questions, any more. I won’t be part of running up the post counts on that stuff. Well, except for one more, I am not responding to these posts anymore, post. geez…lol!
By Deni G on 05/13/2008 1:41 pm
Maurine H
Deni - ha! ha! ha! ha! p.s. this doesn’t count as a post.
By Maurine H on 05/13/2008 1:45 pm
Deni G
you crack me up!
By Deni G on 05/13/2008 2:19 pm
Deni G
I love tea…I also love stove top mocha…which I shall pour myself, right now. very nice in here. I feel like I just stepped from the middle of the freeway and into a garden…with kitty cats! and puppy dogs! and tea!
By Deni G on 05/13/2008 2:58 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Cream and sugar, please, lily. Now, did everyone go check out Lily’s lovely artwork? http://www.psptubedepot.com/artists/km/lilyotv.htm (Makes for a nice “afternoon at the museum.”
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/13/2008 6:28 pm
Frannie Em
Mugsy, thanks for the link, and Lily OTV - beautiful and interesting work
By Frannie Em on 05/14/2008 12:05 am
Maurine H
Likewise!
By Maurine H on 05/13/2008 2:53 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Just FYI, Ladies, of the 541 posts on the “negotiating withdrawal” thread, Renata accounted for 81, and Suzanne de for 93, or 174 total = 32% of all posts by numbers, but, I should imagine somewhat more by actual word-count. (Clearly I don’t have enough to do today if I’m figuring this out!)
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/13/2008 8:19 pm
Deni G
Interesting…hmmm. I have posted my swan song and posted my last on the crazy-making threads. I pledge to stop adding to the threads of mind numbing questions and thereby encouraging the founders to put more of them up. I am not the most disciplined person in the world. But I’m going to do my very best! And the cookie dough shall not be broken!
By Deni G on 05/13/2008 8:53 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Still waiting for my ride, so, of the 62,407 words on that thread, the dynamic duo account for 25,700 of ‘em, or 41%. Now, as to the new Lily o the Valley art posts, yes! Beautiful! More tea, please. Mine got cold while I was doing the numbers. Thanks.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/13/2008 10:13 pm
Linda Clark
I just returned from your blog; fantastic reading! As for “negotiating withdrawal” and your not having enough to do today ………. I just want to know what vitamins you’re taking. On my best day I wouldn’t be able to keep up with you!
By Linda Clark on 05/13/2008 8:57 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Baci Baci, Linda. Well, as a post-cancer person, I could fund the budget of a small country with my vitamins expenditures. And even so, I can’t keep up with me, either. What I normally do is what I found worked when traveling in Italy — just go all out full bore one day and then rest the next. I don’t like it, but it is what I can do.
By Mugsy Peabody on 05/14/2008 7:34 pm
Frannie Em
Mugsy, re 8:10pm Lol oh sheesh lol lol. I mean how much caffeine do they consume to maintain their ‘run’? I had to stay away from it. It was so uninteresting. They just cut and paste stuff all over the place for anything you say. Is Barack going to show up and give them a prize? Whatever.
By Frannie Em on 05/14/2008 12:12 am