Anonymous wrote:We have one and have the best daughter in the world. We could afford to send her to the best private school, Ivy, plus help her when she needs it. Means we can travel wherever/whenever we want. Two would have been a stretch. Would have had to settle for public school and state university. Ugh!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up as an only child and socially I think I lost out. Without a sibling to tease me and teach me how to work through arguments, I often found social situations very challenging, anxiety inducing and I failed in them. In fact I'd say I failed in most social situations until now as an adult I just avoid them, unless they are brief and light.
This is what I worry about for my child, who is an only. He is improving in his ability to relate to other kids socially but my observation of most of his peers who have a sibling or two is that they are far more relaxed in social situations.
I wrote that. The counter-balance of course is that your child will be more likely to grow up independent, single-minded, fairly determined and driven in terms of his own path, less likely to compare himself to others. I know this has been the case for me and there was a really well written article in the NYTimes a few years ago which backed this up.
The thing is this, there are pros and cons to any sibling (or lack of) situation. Try not to focus on the good stuff. I'm sorry if I made you worry more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up as an only child and socially I think I lost out. Without a sibling to tease me and teach me how to work through arguments, I often found social situations very challenging, anxiety inducing and I failed in them. In fact I'd say I failed in most social situations until now as an adult I just avoid them, unless they are brief and light.
This is what I worry about for my child, who is an only. He is improving in his ability to relate to other kids socially but my observation of most of his peers who have a sibling or two is that they are far more relaxed in social situations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up as an only child and socially I think I lost out. Without a sibling to tease me and teach me how to work through arguments, I often found social situations very challenging, anxiety inducing and I failed in them. In fact I'd say I failed in most social situations until now as an adult I just avoid them, unless they are brief and light.
This is what I worry about for my child, who is an only. He is improving in his ability to relate to other kids socially but my observation of most of his peers who have a sibling or two is that they are far more relaxed in social situations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:only child who grew up with a huge extended family
I have two kids - but only b/c we're older parents. I didn't want to saddle one kid with aging parents! truth!
Often it works out that one child gets stuck with it anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up as an only child and socially I think I lost out. Without a sibling to tease me and teach me how to work through arguments, I often found social situations very challenging, anxiety inducing and I failed in them. In fact I'd say I failed in most social situations until now as an adult I just avoid them, unless they are brief and light.
Anonymous wrote:I have three, and I'm so glad I do. But I sometimes envy the lifestyle of having one child. More resources, time, and energy for travel, real restaurants, extracurriculars, etc. Hard to do all that with three.
My kids are fabulous, and good friends. And now that they are older, much more companionable. I love hearing their conversations with each other, the way they wrestle, stick up for one another, joke around, and yes, of course bicker. It's a noisy, happy house. And we have an open door policy, so there are usually pals hanging around too.
Anonymous wrote:I doubt this is what you want to hear, but... I missed having a sibling desperately. When I look back on my childhood, it's me playing alone quietly or reading. I always wanted a playmate and didn't live in a kid friendly neighborhood. I swore I would marry into a large family, but that didn't happen either. I worry that my kids won't have any cousins, and they only have one aunt. I had 14 aunts/uncles and 20 some cousins that I spent summers with (my cousins now are more focused on their own nieces/nephews).
On the pro side, I'm extremely close to my parents and didn't have to fight for attention. They moved to our city when we had kids so they could be there for everything.