Bully in the next bedroom - are we in denial about sibling aggression?
Siblings routinely pick on one another, but when does bickering become bullying - and what can parents do about it?
"The public brushes off aggression between siblings as just rivalry," says Corinna Tucker of the University of New Hampshire.
Tucker is the lead author of a new study on the issue for the journal Pediatrics. Almost a third of the 3,600 children questioned said they had been the victim of some sort of sibling aggression in the past 12 months. The included a range of acts from theft and psychological abuse to physical assault, either mild or severe. In comparison, research suggests that up to a quarter of children are victims of schoolyard aggression every year.
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The following quotes are adapted from real calls to the UK children's counselling service Childline.
"I'm so scared of my brother. He pushes me, shouts at me and sometimes even hits me. Whenever I argue with my mum, he will just gang up on me and make me feel so tiny." Girl, aged 12-15
"My sister is so mean to me. She tells me I'm stupid and makes up all these horrible things about me. Mum and Dad don't do anything to stop it. I cry almost every night and am so angry with everyone. Sometimes I want to disappear." Boy, aged 11 or younger
"My sister has been picking on me for years now and it makes me feel so bad about myself. She calls me fat and ugly and tells me I don't deserve to have friends." Girl, aged 12-15
'I'm so scared of my brother'
The following quotes are adapted from real calls to the UK children's counselling service Childline.
"I'm so scared of my brother. He pushes me, shouts at me and sometimes even hits me. Whenever I argue with my mum, he will just gang up on me and make me feel so tiny." Girl, aged 12-15
"My sister is so mean to me. She tells me I'm stupid and makes up all these horrible things about me. Mum and Dad don't do anything to stop it. I cry almost every night and am so angry with everyone. Sometimes I want to disappear." Boy, aged 11 or younger
"My sister has been picking on me for years now and it makes me feel so bad about myself. She calls me fat and ugly and tells me I don't deserve to have friends." Girl, aged 12-15
Corinna Tucker uses the term
"sibling aggression" in her study, but psychologists are increasingly
reaching for a familiar label for the bad stuff that goes on between
brothers and sisters - bullying. This is defined by experts as
intentional acts of aggression, repeated over a period of time, where an
individual or group is in a position of power over someone.
"A sibling relationship is emotionally intense - it's one of those relationships where you can love them and you can hate them at the same time," says Tucker. "And siblings are natural competitors for family resources and parents' attention."
Laura - who grew up in a house she shared with four siblings and a foster brother - did not consider it bullying at the time, but now thinks the term captures what went on in their house in Ohio.
"My older brother - I would say he beat up on all of us," she says, her voice breaking. Although he never hurt them badly, he liked to wrestle his sisters, pinning them to the floor. "He was bigger and stronger than us - he could put us in very powerless situations. It was really scary."
For her brother, she believes, the activity gave him a momentary sense of control at a chaotic time for the family. Her mother, who had depression, had left home.
The children were all particularly mean to the youngest sister Tracy who had been the focus of their mother's attention. In the afternoons, after school and before their father came home from work, they would tease Tracy until she phoned her mother to try to get them to stop.
"I remember us saying to her: 'Mum can't do anything about it - she isn't coming here,'" recalls Laura. "And my dad - I think he was so overwhelmed that he only ended up dealing with the most serious things."
Her father later told Laura that he had sent her foster brother back to the orphanage because he was being bullied so much by Laura's middle sisters, a pair of twins.
There is a growing recognition of sibling bullying. One paper published this spring in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence highlighted ways in which it differs from playground or cyber bullying.
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What was the worst thing you did to your brother or sister?
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Were you bullied by your brother or sister? Or were you the bully?What was the worst thing you did to your brother or sister?
Tweet @BBCNewsMagazine using #siblingbullying
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Twenty-seven pairs of adult
siblings were questioned about how they had treated each other during
childhood. Most reported they had been bullied, with around a third
saying it had gone on for several years. About three-quarters of the
sample said they had been both bully and victim.
Despite the aggression, victims and perpetrators gave high
ratings for closeness, both before and after the incidents they
described.Most strikingly of all, a majority viewed it as acceptable and almost all the respondents - 85% - said such behaviour should be expected.
"From the young person's perspective and the parent's perspective, we do expect that siblings are going to fight with one another," says Robin Kowalski, the lead author of the study. "But there's normal discord within sibling relationships, and then there's bullying. And I can't tell you where that line is."
Corinna Tucker says that some parents believe conflict between siblings can be healthy since it teaches them how to handle difficult situations. But her study, based on the large telephone survey of children, showed that children who reported recent sibling aggression were more likely to be suffering from mental distress.
Research led by Dieter Wolke at the University of Warwick on large samples of British and Israeli schoolchildren has found that half the children who suffered from sibling bullying also suffered bullying at school - and that this group was particularly at risk of unhappiness or developing behavioural problems.
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Help with sibling bullying
- Children in the UK can phone Childline on 0800 111 or chat to someone on their website
- Parents in the UK can find a professional to help them at the Association for Family Therapy
- In the US, victims of bullying who are feeling distressed can call the National Suicide Prevention Helpline on 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or chat on their website
- Information about bullying can be found at Stop Bullying, Pacer and the NSPCC
"If you only have sibling
bullying or school bullying you are about 2.7 times more likely to have
behaviour problems, but if you have both then it's 14 times more
likely," says Wolke. "And the point about this is that you don't have
any escape. It's 24/7."
"We're very familiar with discussions on the impact of [school] bullying," she says. "I don't think it takes a great imaginative leap to understand the impact of it happening within your own home. You feel that you are not only let down by the person bullying you, but also by the adults in your life that are letting it go unchecked."
While sibling fights are normal, parents need to be aware of a pattern developing over time, she says. Parents are advised to talk to the children about what's happening. If they are worried, they could speak to a health professional.
They should also consider what might be causing the problems. "There is one known predictor - it's when siblings perceive there to be a wide disparity between how they are treated and how their brother and sister are treated," she says.
Play fighting is valuable, since it teaches them what the limits of acceptable behaviour are, says Dieter Wolke. It should be clear to parents when children go too far because they haven't learned the limits - and when they do it on purpose. Parents should be loving but firm, with clear rules, he says.
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Find out more
- Robin Kowalski spoke to Health Check on the BBC World Service
Laura believes that the bullying
in her house happened because her parents failed to intervene, because
they were too preoccupied with their own issues. "We were so overwhelmed
and there was so little adult support to find ways to resolve
conflict," she says.
But like some of her siblings she had therapy. Some of her problems, she says, are due to feeling abandoned by her parents. But there are other issues which she relates directly to the sibling bullying - a learned helplessness and a tendency to avoid conflict.
This is a problem for her professionally, since her job sometimes requires her to turn down applications for funding, which means having tough conversations. "These are really difficult situations for me," she says.
"It sucks to be a middle-aged woman and not know how to do this stuff that you're supposed to learn when you're a teenager."
Some names have been changed to protect individuals' identity.
Robin Kowalski spoke to Health Check on the BBC World Service - listen again to the programme on iPlayer or get the Health Check podcast.
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