Anonymous wrote:virtualteen.org
siblings experiment on each other. touching and all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they say, "I'm too old to share a room with my [brother/sister]."
I'm the PP above with the 2 siblings. While I think this is probably true, it's likely not that helpful. Generally people who have their older kids share do so because they don't have extra bedrooms. Getting extra bedrooms in one way or another (e.g. moving to a bigger place, adding on to your existing place, converting a home office into a bedroom, stopping having an au pair) isn't something that happens overnight, so wanting to know when it's going to happen, and planning in advance makes sense.
I'm actually surprised by the amount of consensus on this thread that 10 or 11 for the older child is probably a good limit.
I agree that generally people who have their older kids share do so because they don't have extra bedrooms. But while the people you know can apparently solve this problem by moving to a bigger place, adding on to the existing place, converting a home office into a bedroom, or stopping having an au pair, the people I know can't.
Anonymous wrote:The idea that different sex siblings can't share a room or that kids need their own rooms is definitely an affluent, modern idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The idea that different sex siblings can't share a room or that kids need their own rooms is definitely an affluent, modern idea.
I think this is true, and I find it really creepy that people are so worried about incest. My brother and I never shared rooms because we had a privileged upbringing, but we definitely shared rooms and even beds in hotel rooms on vacations. I would say beds up until I was about 12 and he was 9, and rooms through adulthood until I got married. He's my brother for crying out loud--I would never ever have directed my adolescent curiosity towards him.
My husband grew up in an 800 square foot mobile home with two sisters until they moved to a larger house in middle school (he grew up in the rural south). There were not enough bedrooms for all three of them to have their own room, and he shared rooms and beds with both of his sisters at various points. His older sister is seven years older, so we're talking about something like a 5 year old and a 12 year old sharing a room. He and his sisters are very close.
Then of course, historically there is the one room log cabin, or if you visit central america you'll see a family of eight in a one room shack.
Not so concerned about incest, but where/when is a teenage boy supposed to beat off if his little sister is in the same room? Ewwww
Anonymous wrote:The idea that different sex siblings can't share a room or that kids need their own rooms is definitely an affluent, modern idea.
I think this is true, and I find it really creepy that people are so worried about incest. My brother and I never shared rooms because we had a privileged upbringing, but we definitely shared rooms and even beds in hotel rooms on vacations. I would say beds up until I was about 12 and he was 9, and rooms through adulthood until I got married. He's my brother for crying out loud--I would never ever have directed my adolescent curiosity towards him.
My husband grew up in an 800 square foot mobile home with two sisters until they moved to a larger house in middle school (he grew up in the rural south). There were not enough bedrooms for all three of them to have their own room, and he shared rooms and beds with both of his sisters at various points. His older sister is seven years older, so we're talking about something like a 5 year old and a 12 year old sharing a room. He and his sisters are very close.
Then of course, historically there is the one room log cabin, or if you visit central america you'll see a family of eight in a one room shack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they say, "I'm too old to share a room with my [brother/sister]."
I'm the PP above with the 2 siblings. While I think this is probably true, it's likely not that helpful. Generally people who have their older kids share do so because they don't have extra bedrooms. Getting extra bedrooms in one way or another (e.g. moving to a bigger place, adding on to your existing place, converting a home office into a bedroom, stopping having an au pair) isn't something that happens overnight, so wanting to know when it's going to happen, and planning in advance makes sense.
I'm actually surprised by the amount of consensus on this thread that 10 or 11 for the older child is probably a good limit.
I agree that generally people who have their older kids share do so because they don't have extra bedrooms. But while the people you know can apparently solve this problem by moving to a bigger place, adding on to the existing place, converting a home office into a bedroom, or stopping having an au pair, the people I know can't.
The idea that different sex siblings can't share a room or that kids need their own rooms is definitely an affluent, modern idea.