Of course, half the time, they'll be occupying one another with some stupid argument over nonsense, so I say enjoy the time when one can't speak! |
|
Having two kids is SO MUCH HARDER. Mine are exactly two years apart and the second child’s first year with a two-year-old sibling was absolutely the hardest year of my life!
Now the older one is three and the little one is 16 months and it’s so much easier. Not easy but definitely easier! |
Uh, you actually think you know what parenting an only child is like? You have three… |
My kids are 5.5 years apart, and I think it's a great age gap. My DC1 was actually helpful when DC2 was born....much of the time anyway. Also DC1 was in full-day kindergarten, so I got lots of one-on-one time with the baby. At night, DH took over baby care and I got to spend time with DC1. It worked well, IMO. They are 18 and 23 now and are good friends. Would not have done it any different. |
|
Yeah, sorry folks. Parent of an only here. It’s easier. Not necessarily better, but easier. It’s less expensive too!
I’m not bragging. I wanted a second but could not conceive and then Covid hit and I got furloughed and we had to table it. Now it probably won’t happen. Sometimes I’m sad about it, but other times when we are talking to or hanging out with friends with multiple, I remember: this is easier. It’s obviously easier. |
I think PP was having a reading comprehension issue. The question was one versus two kids, not babies versus elementary age. |
Yep. It’s SO much easier. I nod and smile when my friends commiserate about how hard parenting is, but honestly I can’t relate at all because parenting my only is a breeze. I’m sad about it sometimes too, but social stigma aside, having one is great for parents and for many kids. |
This gives me hope (mine are just turned 2 and 6 weeks 🤪 and things are already better than they were four weeks ago but still) |
| I don't doubt for a second that having one is easier, but mine are now 5 and 2.5 and they can actually play together, my younger one is starting to be more self sufficient, etc, and things are so so much easier than they were in the beginning! |
This is so true. And, as an older mom with grown kids, it's also so laughable. |
+1 Only-kid mom here too (but by choice). I need parenting on easy mode. I'm not a patient person and I cringe at loud chaos. |
We have a 4 year gap and it has been awesome from the very start. I'd venture a guess that it depends mostly on the personalities of the kids. Our older was a "difficult" infant (severe GERD, tongue tie, really bad sleeper, etc.) and our younger was a dream from day one. Our older is super helpful and adores the little one, and I honestly think it has been easier to have him around than it would have been without him. He entertains the baby, helps grab things, etc. |
+2 Only-kid mom by choice. It's great. |
|
Sometimes it's harder but other times so much easier. My first grader has a teacher workday today and we chose to keep his little sister home from daycare (2 years apart almost to the day). They've been entertaining each other almost all morning while I work on a huge proposal that's due Monday. Had she gone to daycare, he would have been asking me to play all morning
We think their ability to play together took huge leaps during the March-June 2020 quarantine period. It just happened to hit us as a decent time in their development. |
|
3.5 year age gap and my best memories are from when our 2nd was a baby. I loved that time. But I had childcare for my oldest while I was on a long maternity leave with the second and we were always on the go on the weekends.
Once the baby was about 18 mos and very mobile with a feisty personality it got VERY hard. Tiny TH, shared bedroom, no playroom, toddler constantly messing with sibling's stuff. The dynamic of pesty attention-seeking younger sib/annoyed older sib persists even at 9 and 5 and I find it harder now than ever! I think once the 5 year old is a little more mature I'll enjoy it more again. |