Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We wanted one child and now we have a delightful three year old. I very much do not want a second child, nor does my spouse. But I still can’t make peace with the fact I’m “letting my child down” by not giving him a sibling. Most families have a reason for an only that’s from necessity, like secondary infertility. We just love our family and feel complete. But I have so much worry that having parents who feel complete and have fulfilled their family planning hopes means nothing when our son is dealing with dying parents alone.
If we had a second we’d end up giving him two unhappy parents, so I know we are doing the right thing for us. But I wish I had more certainty I wasn’t setting him up for a less positive outcome. Am I over thinking this? Happy kids come from all sorts of families, right?
You and your DH are doing the right thing for your family and are on the same page. Mine is an only and totally fine about it (in that it's the only life they've known) - never asked when babies of other families were around, never asked any other time. I think mine is content![]()
Anonymous wrote:We wanted one child and now we have a delightful three year old. I very much do not want a second child, nor does my spouse. But I still can’t make peace with the fact I’m “letting my child down” by not giving him a sibling. Most families have a reason for an only that’s from necessity, like secondary infertility. We just love our family and feel complete. But I have so much worry that having parents who feel complete and have fulfilled their family planning hopes means nothing when our son is dealing with dying parents alone.
If we had a second we’d end up giving him two unhappy parents, so I know we are doing the right thing for us. But I wish I had more certainty I wasn’t setting him up for a less positive outcome. Am I over thinking this? Happy kids come from all sorts of families, right?
Anonymous wrote:I'm an only with an only. Your feelings are your feelings, so they are valid. That said, I think you should put some working into getting past this. Even if you had another child, there is no guarantee that the siblings would be close. You and your spouse seem united in making this choice-embrace it. You can build a loving community for your child even if you don't provide a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Just wanted to say I feel just like you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Thinking you have control over your child’s happiness is one of the biggest fallacies of parenting.