Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:During this heat wave I am so glad I don't have an only.
My 4.5 and 7 year old boys have been playing fantastically with no fights. They get long great. Older one said last night--I am soooo glad I have a brother.
We just returned from two vacations where they had each other to chase around the beach, etc.
Less work for mom and dad and they are never bored.
Yes. Your kids play together while an only child goes to Europe. I see it now! I'm going to get started on my second right away!
Ummm----my kids go to Europe. They both had passports within a month of their births. It is a wild assumption to assume anyone with more than one kid cant' afford trips to Europe.
(Hush---they also have their college almost paid off and the youngest hasn't even started kindergarten.)
You know what else? If I ask them where they want to go on vacation---it isn't Europe---they'll take Legoland in the US anyday. Thankfully-- we have enough resources to do 'our trip' and 'their trip' each year.
ITs great to have a sibling at those 'boring' adult sight seeing trips in Europe.
Honey, we get it. You love having multiple children AND you're wealthy. Good for you! But not relevant to the thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:During this heat wave I am so glad I don't have an only.
My 4.5 and 7 year old boys have been playing fantastically with no fights. They get long great. Older one said last night--I am soooo glad I have a brother.
We just returned from two vacations where they had each other to chase around the beach, etc.
Less work for mom and dad and they are never bored.
Why do you parents of 2+ feel compelled to read threads about the advantages of only children, only to preach about the wonders of more than one???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thread! I love having one for all the reasons already stated.
And aside from all the selfish reasons, I also think I'm doing something positive for the planet.
Well, maybe. But what the planet really needs are more people that the moms on this board would create: relatively affluent, intelligent, educated and curious. The kinds of people who will be able to think up solutions to an overpopulated planet. We need to reduce the population, but would make most sense by reducing population in impoverished, uneducated, overpopulated areas. Actually, the educated elite should be having MORE children.
Anonymous wrote:What is so hard for some of you to understand? Some of us simply do not want multiple children. It's no slant against your family, it's nothing personal. We just personally do not want 2-3 kids. You don't have to come here and convince us how great it is. For you, it probably is. For people who don't want it, it never will sound or seem wonderful, and we're simply not interested!
Anonymous wrote:During this heat wave I am so glad I don't have an only.
My 4.5 and 7 year old boys have been playing fantastically with no fights. They get long great. Older one said last night--I am soooo glad I have a brother.
We just returned from two vacations where they had each other to chase around the beach, etc.
Less work for mom and dad and they are never bored.
Anonymous wrote:Are you fucking kidding me?
I have no idea who these only freaks are, but I can tell you that as an only, I had plenty of friends to keep me busy. And some of them - gasp!!!! - were only children!
Anonymous wrote:i come from a family of 4 so i have no idea how it would feel for an only. yes, they actually said that. you know what was the worst for them? when they're in college and come back home during the xmas holidays on their break with no siblings to hang out with at home, sure the parents are there but it's not really the same. I knew several onlys who had the same sentiments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:right, there are no guarantees siblings will get along. But i'm not here to argue, and there's no right or wrong answer. And there are valid reasons to having an only and I'm not disputing them, i'm just thinking in the best interest of the child and what makes them ultimately happy, not the parents per se. Sure, if having one will make the parents less crazy, happier family all around. Really? Lot of only childs i know grew up lonely especially around the holidays (Thanks, Xmas) with no silblings around or in other words, would've prefered to have a sibling growing up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:when the only at some point will ask the parents why they didn't have another child and to wish for a brother or sister. How would that make the parent REALLY feel "because only one was in the cards for us due to stress and hardship or other reasons cited here?" I'm sorry but if you are physically and financially able to have another i think you owe it to them to have another. The reality is they need a sibling in this world. Someone to lean on when they become adults, attend their respective weddings, take care of the parents when they get old, on their deathbeds TOGETHER.
I'm just not sold on an only.
My DH is one of four. Every one of them moved far away from their parents and from one another, as soon as they became adults, to every corner of the US.
They hardly ever see one another and rarely talk to each other. They are friendly, but not friends. There was and is no drama/trauma. An average family.
There are no guarantees for anything! You do not have to give your child a sibling. And you certainly should not do it for the often cited reasons of 'giving them a friend' or 'sharing the burden to take care of their aging parents together' . These things have a knack for not panning out.
Are you sure they actually said that, or that you perceived it? I mean, I certainly was "bored" sometimes, but no more than a child with siblings was being picked on or neglected.
Anonymous wrote:I have 3 and love them all to death. But I lament that I spend more time doing things FOR my children than WITH my children. My first was an only for 5 years and I know the difference. I don't really spend much time doing things with my children anymore, but spend TONS of time cooking, cleaning up, driving, watching plays, watching sports, watching recitals, going to dr, dentist appts, buying, washing, sorting and purging outgrown clothes, managing toys, planning and executing birthday parties, hosting play dates, volunteering for school/activity events, etc. This is what fills my time. The amount of time spent curled up on the sofa watching a movie or reading a book or playing a game or making a craft? Very, very minimal compared to the time spent doing the other stuff. And even when I manage to start to do somthing like this, it is too often interrupted by needing to go/do something FOR another child or they start arguing or whatever... I do feel that having one allows you to really enjoy being WITH your child, which is really why all of us became parents, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I also worry about what would happen to my parents if something happened to me.
My husband is the middle child of three. With help from his mother, he handled all his father's arrangements when he died unexpectedly, heart attack. When his mother was diagnosed with a debilitating and terminal illness, it was my big strapping husband who nursed her. He took her to all her doctor's appointments, fed and bathed her. His trifling brother showed up at the funeral. And his selfish spoiled sister would fly in When she thought dear mom was at death door. It did not stop either one of them for taking their inheritance share. But they were no help. P,ease don't assume that siblings will be there for each other or you the parents. Life does not give us guarantees.
Well, not having siblings certainly does guarantee that you won't have siblings that COULD be friends and COULD help out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awesome thread! I love having one for all the reasons already stated.
And aside from all the selfish reasons, I also think I'm doing something positive for the planet.
Well, maybe. But what the planet really needs are more people that the moms on this board would create: relatively affluent, intelligent, educated and curious. The kinds of people who will be able to think up solutions to an overpopulated planet. We need to reduce the population, but would make most sense by reducing population in impoverished, uneducated, overpopulated areas. Actually, the educated elite should be having MORE children.