Anonymous wrote:I have one sibling and we are very close. Even if we weren't though, I feel that there are so many other disadvantages of being an only child. Not only do you not have a sibling, but
1. You don't have anyone in your life who has a shared history with you as a sibling would
2. You don't have anyone to help with the burden of taking care of older parents.
3. You will never be someone's aunt or uncle
4. You will never have nieces or nephews
All of those things are definates. So I am personally going to take a chance and have at least 2 kids. At least there is a decent chance that they will get along and if not, at least they will also have all of the benefits that I listed above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
Cousins and close friends aren't siblings. They are wonderful and you very well might have better relationships with them than you do with a sibling. But they're not the same as a person who grew up in your home with you and shared a set of parents and life experiences with you.
Is your best friend going to be an equal partner with you in making end of care life decisions about your parents? Does a cousin remember family traditions and stories (both good and bad)?
My parents are no longer alive and I would say my sibling and I aren't super close. But she is the one person in the world who has been with me from the beginning. The shared history can't be replaced by other relationships.
Well, that's your perspective but it isn't mine. As a person with siblings I'm not close to, I have to say the shared history isn't that meaningful to me except in a very abstract, sentimental way.
I get what you're saying, OP. I can't even begin to talk about some of the things my siblings did when our parents were alive.
I don't know how old you are, but this may change the older you get. It has become more meaningful to me the older I get and now that my parents are no longer alive.
Anonymous wrote: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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
Cousins and close friends aren't siblings. They are wonderful and you very well might have better relationships with them than you do with a sibling. But they're not the same as a person who grew up in your home with you and shared a set of parents and life experiences with you.
Is your best friend going to be an equal partner with you in making end of care life decisions about your parents? Does a cousin remember family traditions and stories (both good and bad)?
My parents are no longer alive and I would say my sibling and I aren't super close. But she is the one person in the world who has been with me from the beginning. The shared history can't be replaced by other relationships.
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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
Cousins and close friends aren't siblings. They are wonderful and you very well might have better relationships with them than you do with a sibling. But they're not the same as a person who grew up in your home with you and shared a set of parents and life experiences with you.
Is your best friend going to be an equal partner with you in making end of care life decisions about your parents? Does a cousin remember family traditions and stories (both good and bad)?
My parents are no longer alive and I would say my sibling and I aren't super close. But she is the one person in the world who has been with me from the beginning. The shared history can't be replaced by other relationships.
Well, that's your perspective but it isn't mine. As a person with siblings I'm not close to, I have to say the shared history isn't that meaningful to me except in a very abstract, sentimental way.
I get what you're saying, OP. I can't even begin to talk about some of the things my siblings did when our parents were alive.
Anonymous wrote:I have one sibling and we are very close. Even if we weren't though, I feel that there are so many other disadvantages of being an only child. Not only do you not have a sibling, but
1. You don't have anyone in your life who has a shared history with you as a sibling would
2. You don't have anyone to help with the burden of taking care of older parents.
3. You will never be someone's aunt or uncle
4. You will never have nieces or nephews
All of those things are definates. So I am personally going to take a chance and have at least 2 kids. At least there is a decent chance that they will get along and if not, at least they will also have all of the benefits that I listed above.
Anonymous wrote: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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
Cousins and close friends aren't siblings. They are wonderful and you very well might have better relationships with them than you do with a sibling. But they're not the same as a person who grew up in your home with you and shared a set of parents and life experiences with you.
Is your best friend going to be an equal partner with you in making end of care life decisions about your parents? Does a cousin remember family traditions and stories (both good and bad)?
My parents are no longer alive and I would say my sibling and I aren't super close. But she is the one person in the world who has been with me from the beginning. The shared history can't be replaced by other relationships.
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.
My best friend is like a sibling to me. In fact, we have a better relationship than my biological sibling and I have. So I don't agree with you. You can get the positive aspects of having a sibling from people who are not, in fact, your biological sibling.
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:OP. Sometimes siblings have good reasons for not being able to help as much. Maybe they work FT (and btw, volunteer work counts). Maybe they are too busy helping others who have a greater need. Maybe they have their own kids to raise who are a handful? Maybe your parent seeks too much attention and comes up with excuses to see the siblings who can't drop things to take them to the store? Perhaps they can take a senior bus? Also, how often did your parents help their parents?