Saturday, October 1, 2022

The Morning: Making friends as an adult

A psychologist has advice.

Good morning. Today, a psychologist and friendship expert has advice for how to make friends as an adult.

María Jesús Contreras

Social studies

I was recently chatting with a colleague whose son just started ninth grade at a new school. He had a tight group of pals in elementary and middle school. Now, at 14, he was starting over, the new kid trying to make new friends.

My colleague described how she'd been coaching her son through the uncomfortable process of finding his people, telling him it takes time, that it might be uncomfortable for a while.

We agreed that this particular discomfort isn't limited to adolescence. "Every time a shift happens, you have to relearn," she said. That shift could be starting a new job, moving to a new city, returning to in-person work, acclimating to life after a divorce.

As children, we have school and, if we're lucky, some combination of parent-negotiated play dates, sports teams and after-school activities that create favorable conditions for making friends. The indignities of finding a new group with whom to eat lunch notwithstanding, your environment is tailored to the cultivation of new ties.

But once we leave formal schooling, we don't find ourselves in cohorts or situations like these as frequently. The advice for adults wishing to make friends is often to join a club, to find a group of people who are into what you're into. We have to seek out the grown-up equivalent of a sandbox, a place where people are oriented toward making connections.

Finding the running club or knitting circle is the administrative part of friendmaking. The greater challenge is moving through the awkwardness and fears of rejection that we may have thought we left in the high school cafeteria. Marisa Franco, a psychologist and the author of "Platonic: How the Science of Attachment Can Help You Make — and Keep — Friends," recently spoke with The Times about strategies for getting over such anxieties. She mentioned a few theories about the dynamics of meeting new people that I found especially intriguing.

The liking gap: We tend to underestimate others' esteem. "When strangers interact, they're usually more liked by the other person than they assume," Dr. Franco said.

The acceptance prophecy: "When people assume others like them, they tend to become warmer and friendlier," she said. And that leads others to respond warmly in turn.

The theory of inferred attraction: People tend to like people who they think like them. "So the more you can show people that you like and value them, the better," Dr. Franco said.

Have you found yourself in a situation where you were trying to make new friends as an adult? How did it go? Tell me about it.

For more

THE WEEK IN CULTURE

Coolio performing in 2019.Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images
  • "A lot of people say it saved them from whatever demons they were dealing with," Coolio said of his song "Gangsta's Paradise." He died this week at 59.

THE LATEST NEWS

President Vladimir Putin addressing a rally in Red Square.Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

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CULTURE CALENDAR

📺 "Nothing Compares" (Sunday): In her 2021 profile of the musician Sinead O'Connor, my colleague Amanda Hess wrote that O'Connor was so famous in the early '90s that "the very dimensions of her skull seemed inscribed in the public consciousness." They were certainly inscribed in mine, after countless transfixed viewings of the "Nothing Compares 2 U" music video. This new Showtime documentary, which examines O'Connor's rise to fame and years in the spotlight, is a fascinating portrait of an artist and her cultural legacy.

🍿 "Bros" (out now): Billy Eichner co-wrote and was an executive producer of this romantic comedy, in which he stars as a perennially single podcast host who gets involved with a buff lawyer who's as skeptical about relationships as Eichner's character is. In her review for The Times, Amy Nicholson called the film a "semisweet, sexually frank queer valentine," and the trailer is full of enough witty one-liners that I'm planning to buy a ticket for this weekend.

RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Suzy Allman for The New York Times

Marcella Hazan's Roast Chicken With Lemons

The weather in New York turned brisk this week, ushering in the beginning of roast chicken season. Arguably, you don't really need a recipe to roast a chicken — just salt it, stick it in a hot oven and then remove when golden and cooked to the bone. But Marcella Hazan's recipe has a twist. She pricks a couple of lemons with a skewer and stuffs them into the chicken cavity before roasting. The lemons perfume the drippings, which make a heady sauce to spoon over the meat. There are dozens of recipe notes with ideas for additions (garlic, thyme, onion, etc.) — and just as many notes that say not to change a thing. The cold nights will last for a while, though, giving you plenty of time to experiment. With roast chicken, it's hard to go wrong.

A selection of New York Times recipes is available to all readers. Please consider a Cooking subscription for full access.

REAL ESTATE

What you get for $380,000: A Victorian cottage in Galveston, Texas; a 1900 rowhouse in Baltimore; or a one-bedroom apartment in Jersey City, N.J.

The hunt: A young couple with two new rescue pups were looking for a starter house in Westchester. Which home did they choose?

At home with Jacques Pépin: The chef, public-television host and social media sweetheart hand-painted tiles in both of the kitchens on his Madison, Conn., property.

Leafminers: You may not know what they're called, but you've probably seen their handiwork.

LIVING

The pool at Buahan, a Banyan Tree Escape, in northern Ubud, Bali.Duwi Mertiana

Check in: An adults-only resort in Bali is one of 10 new standout hotels in Asia.

Pain and gain: Strenuous exercise shouldn't be all suffering.

What's in a label: The F.D.A. has proposed new criteria for "healthy" packaged foods.

Skipped-generation households: More young adults are moving in with their grandparents.

GAME OF THE WEEKEND

Clemson quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei.Ken Ruinard/USA Today Sports, via Reuters

Clemson vs. North Carolina State, college football: These two top-10 teams, considered the best in the Atlantic Coast Conference, will face off in a prime-time matchup that will send one home with its first loss. No. 5 Clemson is coming off a dramatic double-overtime win over Wake Forest, perhaps the best game of Clemson quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei's career. No. 10 N.C. State boasts a solid defense and a victory in last year's meeting. But this year, Clemson is playing at home, where it hasn't lost since 2016. Tonight at 7:30 Eastern on ABC.

NOW TIME TO PLAY

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was journal. Here is today's puzzle.

Take the news quiz to see how well you followed this week's headlines.

Here's today's Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.

Before You Go …

Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times. — Melissa

Matthew Cullen, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Sports: What to read and watch

Read why the NFL's concussion protocols are once again under scrutiny, watch Arsenal face the Spurs.

What to Read This Weekend

Tua Tagovailoa's injury Thursday, in a game against the Cincinnati Bengals, was the second time in a week that he appeared to sustain a head injury.Jeff Dean/Associated Press

The N.F.L. said its concussion protocols were followed when Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was thrown to the ground, slamming his head onto the turf on Sunday. On Thursday, Tagovailoa left the field on a stretcher after a second head hit.

"Truth be told Tua should probably never have been playing," said Emmanuel Acho, a former linebacker who is now an analyst on Fox Sports. "He displayed neurological trauma last week, we disregarded it, labeled it a 'back injury' & let him back in the game."

The N.F.L. has built itself into the most-watched league through marketing brutality, showcasing its players' speed and power in game-size nuggets. The league and its broadcast partners celebrate hard tackles both during games and in endless highlight reels.

The risk of serious injury is part of the calculation for the multimillion-dollar salaries and potential fame.

Read the full article here.

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What to Watch This Weekend

Arsenal will face the Spurs on Saturday.David Klein/Reuters

All times are Eastern.

Soccer

Arsenal (6-1 and still in first place) hosts the Spurs, its London rival. Expect fans to shout "Stand up if you hate Tottenham" frequently (Saturday, 7:30 a.m., USA).

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Football

Just one undefeated team remains in the N.F.L., and, surprisingly, it is the Philadelphia Eagles. They could move to 4-0 this weekend against the Jacksonville Jaguars at home. If the Jags pull off the upset, they would have three wins, as many as they managed all of last season (Sunday, 1 p.m., CBS).

The A.C.C. is in the spotlight, with No. 5 Clemson hosting No. 10 North Carolina State in a battle of unbeatens (Saturday, 7:30 p.m., ABC).

Horse Racing

The most important race in Europe takes place at Longchamp in the Bois de Boulogne in Paris, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. In a huge field of Europe's best, look out for Vadeni, the winner of the French Derby and the Eclipse Stakes, and Luxembourg, who won the Irish Champion Stakes (Sunday, 10:05 a.m., TVG).

News and analysis, on and off the pitch.

Sign up for the On Soccer With Rory Smith newsletter, for Times subscribers only.

Chief soccer correspondent Rory Smith takes you from the biggest matches to the smallest leagues, covering the tactics, history and personalities of the world's most popular sport.

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Déclaration du président Biden sur les tentatives de la Russie d’annexer le territoire ukrainien

Department of State United States of America

Traduction fournie par le département d'État des États-Unis à titre gracieux



La Maison-Blanche
Le 30 septembre 2022

Les États-Unis condamnent la tentative frauduleuse de la Russie d'annexer aujourd'hui le territoire ukrainien souverain. La Russie viole le droit international, foule aux pieds la Charte des Nations unies et affiche son mépris pour les nations pacifiques du monde entier.

Ne nous méprenons pas : ces actions n'ont aucune légitimité. Les États-Unis honoreront toujours les frontières internationalement reconnues de l'Ukraine. Nous continuerons de soutenir les actions menées par l'Ukraine pour reprendre le contrôle de son territoire en renforçant sa position sur le plan militaire et diplomatique, notamment grâce à l'aide supplémentaire à la sécurité de 1,1 milliard de dollars annoncée par les États-Unis cette semaine.

En réponse aux fausses revendications d'annexion de la Russie, les États-Unis, ainsi que leurs alliés et partenaires, annoncent aujourd'hui de nouvelles sanctions. Ces sanctions imposeront des coûts aux personnes et aux entités, en Russie ou ailleurs, qui apportent un soutien politique ou économique aux tentatives illégales de modification du statut du territoire ukrainien. Nous mobiliserons la communauté internationale afin de dénoncer ces agissements et de demander des comptes à la Russie. Nous continuerons de fournir à l'Ukraine les équipements dont elle a besoin pour se défendre, sans être découragée par les manœuvres éhontées de la Russie pour redessiner les frontières de son voisin. Je me réjouis également de signer la législation du Congrès qui fournira 12 milliards de dollars supplémentaires pour soutenir l'Ukraine.

Je demande instamment à tous les membres de la communauté internationale de rejeter les tentatives illégales d'annexion menées par la Russie et de rester aux côtés du peuple ukrainien aussi longtemps qu'il le faudra.


Voir le contenu d'origine : https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/09/30/statement-from-president-biden-on-russias-attempts-to-annex-ukrainian-territory/ 

Nous vous proposons cette traduction à titre gracieux. Seul le texte original en anglais fait foi.

 


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