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Siblings Day 2025: What is it and why is it celebrated?

Siblings Day 2025: What is it and why is it celebrated?

BBC News08-04-2025
Siblings can mean a lot to you - they can be your best friend, someone to give you advice or someone you can play your favourite games with.Siblings Day is a holiday dedicated to siblings, and it takes place on April 10 every year.While Siblings Day is not officially recognised in the UK like Mother's Day and Father's Day, some people still choose to recognise it as a chance to celebrate loved ones.If you want to celebrate your siblings, why not leave a comment at the bottom of the page?
What are siblings?
Simply put, having a sibling means you have a brother or a sister.They can be older or younger and sometimes they may not be directly related to you.A full sibling means you share both the same parents. A half-sibling means you share one parent, so your mum might've had you both but you have different dads for example.Some siblings aren't related by blood at all. Lots of people have step-siblings when two families have joined together.
How can I celebrate Siblings Day?
Anyone with siblings can celebrate the day - it could be a great chance to say thank you to a sibling that has helped you out recently.Maybe you could make time to play a game that you know your sibling likes, or do some arts and crafts together.You could write a special card for your brother or sister, and tell them what they mean to you.We want to know about you and your siblings. Do you have a sibling you want to celebrate? Let us know in the comments!
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What counts as a ‘bad day' is subjective – but I've found something that I'm sure annoys absolutely anyone
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Do we agree what a bad day looks like? TikTokers have been describing their low-key 'days from hell' – and it has made me wonder. Mine would involve getting up before 5am after a sleepless night to find a 'morning person' house guest already in the kitchen, drinking the last of the coffee from my special mug and wanting to talk politics. Trying to work, I'd face a soundscape of nearby pneumatic drilling and Capital FM, and be regularly interrupted by spam calls from 'HMRC'. After an afternoon at the dentist, dinner would be plain farfalle (the worst pasta). I'd have to go out in the evening by car and parallel park, then get home to realise I'd lost my keys. Would that bother anyone else? Or is the small stuff people sweat – and it is small, truly the definition of first world problems – entirely personal? Conducting a survey (that is, watching many TikToks of dewy young people pointing to bullet-pointed lists in their notes apps) revealed a few commonalities. A very high proportion of their annoying days start with waking up in someone else's house, hungover, which does, I agree, sound suboptimal. The TikTokers also really hate being hot, which is probably a function of when this trend is emerging (ask them in January and I suspect you'd get a different answer), but relatable. Forgotten or unwelcome social plans that can't be cancelled without guilt, technological snafus and exercise classes too expensive to skip also recurred regularly. After that, the consensus crumbles. Everyone has their own loathed chores, modes of transport or parts of town: there's a beautiful specificity to the likes of getting into platform 16 at Leeds station, a Hinge date booking 'Caffè Concerto in Piccadilly Circus' or 'shopping for a present for a six-year-old boy in Westfield Stratford'. But one thing seems to unite TikTok and, I suspect, everyone beyond: that there is no mild discomfort like a mobile phone with less than 10% juice and no charger.

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tiktok-days-from-hell-trend-things-everyone-hates

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tiktok-days-from-hell-trend-things-everyone-hates

Do we agree what a bad day looks like? TikTokers have been describing their low-key 'days from hell' – and it has made me wonder. Mine would involve getting up before 5am after a sleepless night to find a 'morning person' house guest already in the kitchen, drinking the last of the coffee from my special mug and wanting to talk politics. Trying to work, I'd face a soundscape of nearby pneumatic drilling and Capital FM, and be regularly interrupted by spam calls from 'HMRC'. After an afternoon at the dentist, dinner would be plain farfalle (the worst pasta). I'd have to go out in the evening by car and parallel park, then get home to realise I'd lost my keys. Would that bother anyone else? Or is the small stuff people sweat – and it is small, truly the definition of first world problems – entirely personal? Conducting a survey (that is, watching many TikToks of dewy young people pointing to bullet-pointed lists in their notes apps) revealed a few commonalities. A very high proportion of their annoying days start with waking up in someone else's house, hungover, which does, I agree, sound suboptimal. The TikTokers also really hate being hot, which is probably a function of when this trend is emerging (ask them in January and I suspect you'd get a different answer), but relatable. Forgotten or unwelcome social plans that can't be cancelled without guilt, technological snafus and exercise classes too expensive to skip also recurred regularly. After that, the consensus crumbles. Everyone has their own loathed chores, modes of transport or parts of town: there's a beautiful specificity to the likes of getting into platform 16 at Leeds station, a Hinge date booking 'Caffè Concerto in Piccadilly Circus' or 'shopping for a present for a six-year-old boy in Westfield Stratford'. But one thing seems to unite TikTok and, I suspect, everyone beyond: that there is no mild discomfort like a mobile phone with less than 10% juice and no charger.

‘Our world was a better place with you in it': Loved ones celebrate life of Jaidyn Rice as hundreds attend funeral
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St Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Bangor was illuminated in pink, as the coffin and many mourners were adorned in Jaidyn Rice's favourite colour. Hundreds of funeral goers filled the Clandeboye Road hall for the teen's funeral on Wednesday to hear the deep connections she had formed with those around her and the 'big plans' her future held. The 16-year-old was struck by a car on the West Circular Road of Bangor on July 8 and was pronounced dead at the scene. The sermon saw a host of relatives, friends and volunteer groups with which she spent her time, such as the DICE project and Army Cadet Force (ACF), who all extended personal stories and tributes. Speaking first was Jaidyn's mum, Elaine Clarke, who stood side by side with her son, Kenley, and partner, Christopher. 'I've written you so many messages and notes and cards and letters over the years, but never did I ever think I'd ever be writing you anything under these circumstances,' Elaine said. 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She was someone who was going to be looked up to someone we trusted and someone who was already making a difference.' Poppy Andrews, who spoke on behalf of Jaidyn's friends, explained how the pair made many memories that she will 'cherish forever', and she shared a moment which brought warm laughter to the hall. 'My favourite memory of all time is when she was phoning the Chinese to order our dinner and she accidentally said 'love you' at the end of the phone call,' Poppy said. She added: 'You'll never be forgotten. I love you unconditionally. I can't even put my love for you into words. 'I'll miss our calls and just sitting in our room, or sitting in my room in silence as we watched TikTok, but it meant the world, just having your company. I hope Heaven knows what a wonderful girl they've gained.' Addressing those gathered, Reverend Ian McKee said: 'None of us could have foreseen this scenario that we'd be gathered together today to pay our last respects to Jaidyn Rice, who everyone loved deeply and adored absolutely. Her untimely death has devastated the family circle and shocked the whole community right to the core. 'Jaidyn was a beautiful, very special young lady. She loved, apparently, the colour pink, hence her pink Bible and the pink coffin. I'm told if she could have had her way, she would have dyed her pet hamster pink too.' Jaidyn's boyfriend, Ethan McClerg, also spoke at the service alongside Poppy and recalled the huge role she played in his life. He shared how the two acquired a hamster, which they agreed to have 'joint custody' of, naming it Jabba. 'One of my favourite memories of Jaidyn was how she wanted a friend of mine who had a fake ID to, not buy alcohol, not run anywhere, but to run into Pets at Home and get a hamster,' Ethan recalled. 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