There was also the distinct possibility that for Maria, discussion of her own background and her twinship was a taboo subject. ❋ Taylor, Abra (1982)
Shakespeare was a father to (non-identical) twins and his farce of false sightings could be seen as a cautious celebration of twinship. ❋ Unknown (2010)
I guess that says it, really, about the nature of “twinship.” ❋ Jack Canfield (2009)
Born one minute apart, we were a rambunctious twosome, enthralled with our twinship. ❋ Jack Canfield (2009)
Just recently, against everyone's "better judgment," Rabbi Marc Schneier and I, through The Foundation For Ethnic Understanding, created twinship programs where imans speak in synagogues and rabbis speak in mosques. ❋ Unknown (2009)
Perhaps Charlottesville should form a twinship with a town in Iran and create a student exchange. ❋ Unknown (2008)
What I am seeing, from a variety of different perspectives, is how crucial empathy is in the healthy development of human beings -- and that when we don't experience some healthy form of mirroring or even more importantly, a sense of twinship with another human being as children, we often grow up with a fist-sized hole in our hearts. ❋ William Harryman (2007)
‘It is good that you have allowed them to retain the closeness of their twinship and yet at the same time encouraged them to develop their individual and different skills,’ the Professor told Sasha. ❋ Jordan, Penny (2006)
But their lack of passion, of hope, of despair, of a sense of the twinship of love and death, is incomprehensible to me. ❋ Allan Bloom (2003)
Parents whose twin dies lose not only the baby but the special twinship that exists between twins. ❋ Brile (2002)
The alter-ego, or twinship, transference is one in which the patient experiences the therapist as a carbon copy of or someone like himself or herself. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
In his efforts at treating patients with narcissistic personality disorders, Kohut discovered what he called the “selfobject transferences,” which reflect the revival of frustrated early mirroring, idealization, and alter-ego, or twinship, needs in the new, more empathic and non-judgmental context of treatment. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
Once the selfobject transference of a twinship nature was established, Ms. Silver began to feel less alone and more present. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
The sudden loss of these early twinship relationships or other types of related trauma may leave the self needful of intense twinship experiences with others in order to feel alive, connected, and affirmed. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
She related to the worker as her contemporary and as a professional peer and looked to her for a certain amount of mirroring and twinship. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
For example, Kohut defined the concept of transference differently, seeing the selfobject transferences as reflecting the revival of frustrated early mirroring, idealization, and twinship needs in a new, more empathic and nonjudgmental context. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
In treatment, Ms. Saunders formed a twinship transference, which seemed to be reinforced by her perception of the worker as similar in age, general appearance, and sense of humor. ❋ EDA G. GOLDSTEIN (2001)
Anna: oh my god, i just figured out who sang that song on that commercial!
Molly: [your kidding], i was just watching that and thinking about how i was gonna [text you]!
Anna: we are sooo [twinsies]! twinship! ❋ Twinsiesssss123456 (2009)
Mike and Katie arent related. They both hate socks and [projects]. But they both love orange [starbursts] and running.They also have everything else in common and always keep finding new things.This means they have a [twinship]. ❋ Maktie (2009)