Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest was 12 and 15 when his two youngest siblings were born. He felt close to them because he attended their births (and cut 4's cord) and spent time with them as babies. THEY felt close to him after he went off to college and we let them visit for siblings weekends (little clunky at first but we worked it out). When he was able to take the youngest ones out by himself and they'd come home all excited they'd had an adventure, which created inside jokes and memories only they shared, they started feeling the bond.
There's so much more to sibling closeness than age difference. My DH and is brother are 13 months apart and never talk or see each other.
Anonymous wrote:My oldest was 12 and 15 when his two youngest siblings were born. He felt close to them because he attended their births (and cut 4's cord) and spent time with them as babies. THEY felt close to him after he went off to college and we let them visit for siblings weekends (little clunky at first but we worked it out). When he was able to take the youngest ones out by himself and they'd come home all excited they'd had an adventure, which created inside jokes and memories only they shared, they started feeling the bond.
Anonymous wrote:So anwering as someone with a sibling closer in age and with a larger gap. Growing up my sibling and I with the closer age gap had the tighter bond, naturally as we were going through similia stages. The larger gap was almost like different families yes we loved each other, but she had her own life, in some ways were like her dolls or babies.
As adults were all pretty close.