The following is an excerpt from Love Language by Linda Marigliano, a memoir of people-pleasing, family and what it means to love and be loved.
When I was six, I learned how to lie.
It was my first day of kindergarten. My older brother, Sam, and I stood side by side in our driveway in our school uniforms, all knobbly knees and white socks. My thick hair was tugged into neat, tight plaits and Sam's was gelled back like a suave newsreader's, a slick black mop atop his head. Our dad was a hairdresser, and he had styled our looks carefully.