Anonymous wrote:A LOT of parents of multiple kids in this thread for parents of only children, talking about how bad it is to have an only child.
Y'all are telling on yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My best friend has an only child. She may not notice it because this is her only frame of reference but her son is self centered and unable to deal with any compromise relating to his desires. I have 5 children that share, laugh, fight, compromise, apologize and are incredibly loyal to one another. When we are gone they will have each other’s backs and that is priceless.
1. You don’t know what your kids’ relationships will be like as adults. I hope they get along, but many, many people do not get along with their siblings as adults.
2. Kids can be self-centered in sibling situations just as easily as in one-kid situations. Don’t generalize.
Anonymous wrote:My best friend has an only child. She may not notice it because this is her only frame of reference but her son is self centered and unable to deal with any compromise relating to his desires. I have 5 children that share, laugh, fight, compromise, apologize and are incredibly loyal to one another. When we are gone they will have each other’s backs and that is priceless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard to believe all these parents can't think of any real cons with an only. I wish someone would be honest... seems like a lot of defensive families otherwise, and not very believable.
The fact that you can’t believe that we’re happy with our choices says way more about you than us.
Oh I believe you are happy. I just think there are cons that we should be ok with admitting and discussion. Every decision has good and bad attached to it.
Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard to believe all these parents can't think of any real cons with an only. I wish someone would be honest... seems like a lot of defensive families otherwise, and not very believable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard to believe all these parents can't think of any real cons with an only. I wish someone would be honest... seems like a lot of defensive families otherwise, and not very believable.
The fact that you can’t believe that we’re happy with our choices says way more about you than us.
Anonymous wrote:We have two children, 3 years apart, and it's been very helpful during this pandemic. They play together, sleep in the same bed, make our house feel full and not lonely. We've found there's an economy of scale with siblings. They're both the same sex, so we can use the same clothes. They can also use hand me down bikes, toys, books, etc. Child care costs are a factor as well as camp or activity fees. But we would never have it another way. if you;re both not convinced, stick with one. How does your child feel? Maybe consider what she wants?
Anonymous wrote:I find it very hard to believe all these parents can't think of any real cons with an only. I wish someone would be honest... seems like a lot of defensive families otherwise, and not very believable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have two children, 3 years apart, and it's been very helpful during this pandemic. They play together, sleep in the same bed, make our house feel full and not lonely. We've found there's an economy of scale with siblings. They're both the same sex, so we can use the same clothes. They can also use hand me down bikes, toys, books, etc. Child care costs are a factor as well as camp or activity fees. But we would never have it another way. if you;re both not convinced, stick with one. How does your child feel? Maybe consider what she wants?
How on earth is this a useful reply to the OP‘s question? Your experience has nothing to do what she’s asked about. This thread was impressively free of parents of multiples bragging about how much better their situation is until you posted…
And no, ffs, OP shouldn’t make a decision about her family size depending on what her child wants! Kids don’t get to make major life decisions for their families. That’s messed up in so many ways.
Anonymous wrote:We have two children, 3 years apart, and it's been very helpful during this pandemic. They play together, sleep in the same bed, make our house feel full and not lonely. We've found there's an economy of scale with siblings. They're both the same sex, so we can use the same clothes. They can also use hand me down bikes, toys, books, etc. Child care costs are a factor as well as camp or activity fees. But we would never have it another way. if you;re both not convinced, stick with one. How does your child feel? Maybe consider what she wants?