Anonymous wrote:Op - you're right that there's no guarantee. However, if you don't have a sibling, it's guaranteed that you will not have the positive aspects of having a sibling.
I understand what you are saying, OP, and I'm sorry your siblings aren't stepping up as they should.
Many of us are fortunate to have good relationships with our siblings. I love both my brothers so much and I know I can count on them. We are fortunate that even as adults, we still enjoy each others company and look forward to being together. My children are being raised in this type of environment, so I hope they will have the same joys as adults. But you are right, you cannot guarantee it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - you're right that there's no guarantee. However, if you don't have a sibling, it's guaranteed that you will not have the positive aspects of having a sibling.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Op - you're right that there's no guarantee. However, if you don't have a sibling, it's guaranteed that you will not have the positive aspects of having a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As an only child, I am so happy to have two children who get along so well (boy and girl, 5 years apart).
Remember, OP, that as parents we have some control over how our children interact. We can model healthy communication and boundaries and intervene when necessary. You are looking at this from the perspective of a powerless child.
I don't know of anyone who has had extra children because they were "supposed" to. Seems a pretty big financial, physical and emotional effort if you don't have an urge to love another child, no?
A new poster here. I just want to address the bolded, because my mother tried to hard to manipulate the relationship between my brother and I while we were growing up. She viewed him as the golden child, and I was constantly told how great a brother I had, how lucky I was to have him as a brother. He of course, used this to his advantage and my mother always took his side by punishing me any time we fought. By the time we were teens we beat the shit out of each other any time we were home alone. We both had to put up huge walls and really distance ourselves from our parents in order to forge any type of sibling relationship.
So I caution you: don't use that control so much. Now my mother has two grown adult children who DO get along, just like she claims she always wanted, but almost no relationship with us.
Anonymous wrote:
As an only child, I am so happy to have two children who get along so well (boy and girl, 5 years apart).
Remember, OP, that as parents we have some control over how our children interact. We can model healthy communication and boundaries and intervene when necessary. You are looking at this from the perspective of a powerless child.
I don't know of anyone who has had extra children because they were "supposed" to. Seems a pretty big financial, physical and emotional effort if you don't have an urge to love another child, no?