試す 金 - 無料
Dishing Dirt
Reader's Digest India
|February 2023
Not all gossip is bad. Here’s how to quash the meanspirited kind
WHEN I WAS in elementary school, the nuns told us, “If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything.”
Alice Roosevelt Longworth, President Theodore Roosevelt’s daughter, and a famous gossip, took the opposite view. She kept a pillow on her sofa, needle pointed with her still-popular motto, “If you can’t say something good about someone, sit right here by me.”
People who study gossip define it as any talk about people who are not present. It can be positive, neutral or negative, but it’s the mean-spirited variety—Alice Longworth’s favourite— that has traditionally inspired disapproval. For many of us, hearing and telling scandalous stories counts as a guilty pleasure.
And yet, gossip is by no means a black-and-white affair. We have a natural need for human connection, and gossip feeds that, for good and ill. Much depends on the motivation of the gossiper: are they aiming to warn people about a bad actor, or are they enjoying the malicious pleasure of spreading a harmful story? It comes down to curbing the mean variety while benefiting from the useful.
Why We Gossip
The reasons why people indulge in gossip or shun it are as individual as they are. In 20 years of friendship, I have never heard Lyndsay Green, a sociologist and author, dish the dirt about anyone. When I asked her why she never gossips, she traced her behaviour back to her school days—and her own sense of security.
このストーリーは、Reader's Digest India の February 2023 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Reader's Digest India からのその他のストーリー
Reader's Digest India
Ash and After
Amid the ruins and rhythms of our times, Anju Dodiya paints what remains—empathy, imagination, and quiet endurance
4 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
Krishna (Spring in Kulu)
The Russian painter, writer, philosopher and public intellectual Nicholas Roerich (1874-1947) was one of those rare individuals for whom the often-misused word 'polymath' truly applied—his interests in and mastery over wildly disparate parts of the human experience was undeniable.
1 min
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
A Single Spark
When a woman caught on fire at a barbecue, Ralph Tölke acted immediately
3 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
STAYING AHEAD OF SUPERBUGS
INFECTIOUS BACTERIA ARE BECOMING HARDER TO TREAT WITH ANTIBIOTICS, PUTTING MILLIONS OF PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD AT RISK
8 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
CRAFTED IN KOLHAPUR
FROM HANDCRAFTED CHAPPALS AND GOLD SAAJ TO FIERY CURRIES AND HOMESPUN KINDNESS—KOLHAPUR IS A CITY WHERE LEGACY IS STITCHED, MOULDED, AND SIMMERED INTO EVERYDAY LIFE
4 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
REVERSING THE RISE
How smart habits, good food, and mindful living can help you take control of diabetes- one step at a time
3 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
What Were You Inking?!?
Not everyone still loves their tattoos 20 years (or even 20 minutes) later
8 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
The Power of Kindness
Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on mothers in positions of power and ...
3 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR FOOD
Save money and cut waste with these tips— from bulk buying to storing the right way
4 mins
November 2025
Reader's Digest India
MEXICO'S DAY OF THE DEAD - Beauty Beyond the Grave
Step into a country where life and death meet in parades, altars, flavours, and flowers—each region offering its own spellbinding tribute to the departed
4 mins
November 2025
Translate
Change font size
