Anonymous wrote:
My brother and I sat in my backyard and tried to figure out what a cousin is. We both have children, so they are cousins to one another, but we have no context for understanding what that's supposed to look like because we had zero extended family growing up. No role models at all for their interaction. It is kind of weird for us. We know friendship though, so we started with that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for family, create your own with friends and neighbors. Every Thanksgiving, we get together with our dear friends who live 3 miles away. I met them at work. Their kids and our 2 kids are, for all intents and purposes, cousins.
OP here. People always say this but it's far easier said than done. Do you know how hard it is to find anyone who is not celebrating major holidays with their own extended family? I live out in the suburbs (Ashburn) and nearly every family I meet is from here or has tons of family here. Or they travel to spend holidays with family. I never meet anyone like us who is not from this area and has no local family here and doesn't spend holidays with family. When I do invite people for holidays and they decline for whatever reason, I feel like I appear lonely and pathetic. It is especially hard when most other families I meet/are at our preschool have 3+ kids. Not that that's important, but it is much, much harder to try to make family friends with families with multiple kids when you just have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for family, create your own with friends and neighbors. Every Thanksgiving, we get together with our dear friends who live 3 miles away. I met them at work. Their kids and our 2 kids are, for all intents and purposes, cousins.
OP here. People always say this but it's far easier said than done. Do you know how hard it is to find anyone who is not celebrating major holidays with their own extended family? I live out in the suburbs (Ashburn) and nearly every family I meet is from here or has tons of family here. Or they travel to spend holidays with family. I never meet anyone like us who is not from this area and has no local family here and doesn't spend holidays with family. When I do invite people for holidays and they decline for whatever reason, I feel like I appear lonely and pathetic. It is especially hard when most other families I meet/are at our preschool have 3+ kids. Not that that's important, but it is much, much harder to try to make family friends with families with multiple kids when you just have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I grew up as an only child with very little extended family - and I had a very happy childhood. If you had those relationships and they were special to you I can understand feeling sad your child won't have them too, but you have to remember that your child only knows his own experience - and he won't miss something he doesn't have. Make your own fun and family traditions. Do something special together on holidays instead of feeling sad you're not spending time with a big extended family - see a show or a movie, have a special thing you cook together, go for a hike, etc.
OP here. As an only, I had an okay childhood, but definitely felt I missed out on extended family connections. I have to disagree with the idea that "he won't miss something he doesn't have." I grew up as an only with no local family, and really missed having that sense of a big, loving, involved extended family, even as a child. I always knew that I was missing out on the kinds of fun family get togethers that my peers were getting to do all the time with Sunday dinners at Grandma's, holidays with cousins, etc. As a high schooler I despised the lonely holidays we had with just my family of 3, I always felt like I was missing out. For example on Thanksgiving we would go out for Thanksgiving brunch, just the 3 of us, and I always felt so lonely doing that. So although yes in a way that's all I ever knew, at the same time I had the emotional intelligence, even as a child, to see what I was missing out on and grew up feeling very lonely.
Anonymous wrote:
As for family, create your own with friends and neighbors. Every Thanksgiving, we get together with our dear friends who live 3 miles away. I met them at work. Their kids and our 2 kids are, for all intents and purposes, cousins.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I grew up as an only child with very little extended family - and I had a very happy childhood. If you had those relationships and they were special to you I can understand feeling sad your child won't have them too, but you have to remember that your child only knows his own experience - and he won't miss something he doesn't have. Make your own fun and family traditions. Do something special together on holidays instead of feeling sad you're not spending time with a big extended family - see a show or a movie, have a special thing you cook together, go for a hike, etc.