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  1. Oct 30, 2010 · Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me. We all know how untrue that childhood incantation is. Words do hurt. Ridicule, disdain, humiliation, and taunting all cause ...

    • We’re hardwired to feel emotional pain as well as physical pain. It’s been hypothesized that it’s not just the human infant’s many years of dependence on caretakers until he or she finally reaches maturity but also the continued reliance of individuals on others for basic sustenance and protection—from the earliest hunter-gather cultures and forward—that makes feeling the loss of social connections an evolutionary advantage.
    • Social pain may be more like physical pain than not. While both physical and emotional pain both “hurt,” they seem, on the surface at least, to do so in different ways, right?
    • Words hurt just like sticks and stones. We all know this, despite the adage. When I was writing Mean Mothers, women who were victims of “just” verbal abuse often commented that they wished they’d been hit so that “their wounds and scars would show.”
    • Some of us are more sensitive to pain—both social and physical— than others. It’s called “rejection sensitivity,” and what it means is that some of us expect and anxiously anticipate social exclusion or rejection, are quick to perceive it, and react to it really strongly.
  2. Dec 11, 2023 · Sticks and stones is a retort, a nursery rhyme, often used when taunted or insulted; the expression is meant to show that you won’t be affected by taunts, insults, or bullying. The idiom sticks and stones is an abbreviation of the proverb, ‘sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me.’

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  3. Oct 13, 2024 · Key points. Words can lead to distrust, harbored resentment, and even an irreparable rift or a breakup. Make sure you're checking your words for critical injury potential. Personal insults erode ...

  4. Oct 10, 2022 · Sticks and stones may break your bones, but words can change your brain. ... There has been a lot of research into the power of words. And the answer to that is no. ... Words can hurt, but they ...

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  5. 60-second answer. Do you remember hearing “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me?”. Research shows that this age-old saying simply isn’t true. Often, the physical impact of bullying (the “sticks and stones”) is easy to recognize, such as a child getting up after being pushed, damaged personal items, or ...

  6. STICKS AND STONES MAY BREAK MY BONES, (BUT WORDS CAN NEVER HURT ME) definition: 1. said in order to show that people cannot be hurt by unpleasant things that are said to them 2….

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