Anonymous wrote:I think you can’t force them to like each other. My kids are also super different from each other and that’s just how it is. I don’t allow name calling, rude speech or anything like that but you can’t make them appreciate each other. If they do anything nicely together praise that a lot and notice any activity they both enjoy and facilitate that. My daughter does not love sports like her younger brother but she will participate in a few, which is good exercise too. If you see one of them being flexible to accommodate their sibling, praise that. If you notice they’ve done something kind and it makes the other one happy, point that out. I read that somewhere and my oldest in particular seems delighted to have made her younger brother happy through kindness.
But mostly I think you can not make things worse by pitting them against each other or comparing or trying to force activities that aren’t working.
Anonymous wrote:It's mostly a phase they should get through as they learn more about each other. My younger sister and I are a year apart and night and day in terms of personality. We used to fight all the time at that age. We are extremely close now.
However, I would take some steps to improve their current situation ( and for your own peace- our fighting drove my parents crazy).Talk to them like you would an adult. Explain the benefits of relationships and how a relationship is a 2 way street. Guide them to draw boundaries that are firm and respectful.
Tell the younger one that it is important to respect other people's spaces and guide her to keep her toys in her own area of the room. If the room is big enough, use a divider and make each girl's section a little unique.
When my children were those ages, my older one was much more caring than her younger sister. If she got something to eat from the counter or the fridge, she would remember to get one for her sister. She was always that way. I would tell the then 6 year old that relationships are reciprocal and intentional, and if she appreciated that her big sister always thought about her, she had an obligation to do the same for her big sister.
When my older daughter needed space, I would explain it to my younger one and guide her to something she could do by herself or with me if possible.
Anonymous wrote:Is their room a play room or could you just make it more a “this is where you dress and sleep” place, to simplify the clashing personalities?
I have two girls sharing a room but their personalities don’t really come out because it’s just their beds, dressers and a desk.