Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
My 10 year old told me yesterday that she’s glad she doesn’t have a sibling.
And my child has an 11 year old friend who said yesterday that she wishes she had a sibling. I’m friends with the mother and I know the backstory - they tried to have another but just couldn’t, and the girl used to ask for a sibling but eventually stopped talking about it with them to not make them feel bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
My 10 year old told me yesterday that she’s glad she doesn’t have a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Is this the teacher? What grade do you teach?
IME working as a counselor with kids of various ages, it's common for preschool and early elementary kids who are onlies to wish they had siblings, but way less common to hear this from tweens and teens. Little kids want siblings because they want built-in playmates.
Some families are dysfunctional, and an only child in a dysfunctional family might long for a sibling, who they envision as an ally in navigating family challenges. But my observation is that in dysfunctional families with siblings, it rarely works that way. The sibling relationships wind up being dysfunctional as well. It's just hard and lonely being in a dysfunctional family -- it being larger doesn't ease that and could make it worse in some cases.
But in functional families, tweens and teens who are onlies virtually never talk about wanting a sibling. By this age they see some of the advantages of being an only and they no longer crave a playmate. Teens tend to highly value independence and crave being treated more like adults as they near actual adulthood. Only children in functional families (so no overbearing parents or couples using their child as a go between or anything like that) tend to get both of those things. I've never encountered a child for whom being an only caused problems. Nor have I met kids for whom having a sibling caused problems (that wouldn't have been there even without the siblings). The one caveat is that I have worked with families where the parents were overwhelmed and struggling to parent and more kids can make that harder. It's just logistically challenging and not everyone is cut out for it. But even with this, it is often other issues (financial difficulties, marital problems) that are the true source of the problems. Not simply the existence of another child.
I really haven't seen any evidence that having or not having siblings is itself a deciding factor for raising well-adjusted kids. I might even go so far as to say it's irrelevant in most cases.
Sorry but what a load of BS. Teens who are onlies don’t still talk about wanting a sibling because by that age, they get it that they aren’t getting one and they try to move on with their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Is this the teacher? What grade do you teach?
IME working as a counselor with kids of various ages, it's common for preschool and early elementary kids who are onlies to wish they had siblings, but way less common to hear this from tweens and teens. Little kids want siblings because they want built-in playmates.
Some families are dysfunctional, and an only child in a dysfunctional family might long for a sibling, who they envision as an ally in navigating family challenges. But my observation is that in dysfunctional families with siblings, it rarely works that way. The sibling relationships wind up being dysfunctional as well. It's just hard and lonely being in a dysfunctional family -- it being larger doesn't ease that and could make it worse in some cases.
But in functional families, tweens and teens who are onlies virtually never talk about wanting a sibling. By this age they see some of the advantages of being an only and they no longer crave a playmate. Teens tend to highly value independence and crave being treated more like adults as they near actual adulthood. Only children in functional families (so no overbearing parents or couples using their child as a go between or anything like that) tend to get both of those things. I've never encountered a child for whom being an only caused problems. Nor have I met kids for whom having a sibling caused problems (that wouldn't have been there even without the siblings). The one caveat is that I have worked with families where the parents were overwhelmed and struggling to parent and more kids can make that harder. It's just logistically challenging and not everyone is cut out for it. But even with this, it is often other issues (financial difficulties, marital problems) that are the true source of the problems. Not simply the existence of another child.
I really haven't seen any evidence that having or not having siblings is itself a deciding factor for raising well-adjusted kids. I might even go so far as to say it's irrelevant in most cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Is this the teacher? What grade do you teach?
IME working as a counselor with kids of various ages, it's common for preschool and early elementary kids who are onlies to wish they had siblings, but way less common to hear this from tweens and teens. Little kids want siblings because they want built-in playmates.
Some families are dysfunctional, and an only child in a dysfunctional family might long for a sibling, who they envision as an ally in navigating family challenges. But my observation is that in dysfunctional families with siblings, it rarely works that way. The sibling relationships wind up being dysfunctional as well. It's just hard and lonely being in a dysfunctional family -- it being larger doesn't ease that and could make it worse in some cases.
But in functional families, tweens and teens who are onlies virtually never talk about wanting a sibling. By this age they see some of the advantages of being an only and they no longer crave a playmate. Teens tend to highly value independence and crave being treated more like adults as they near actual adulthood. Only children in functional families (so no overbearing parents or couples using their child as a go between or anything like that) tend to get both of those things. I've never encountered a child for whom being an only caused problems. Nor have I met kids for whom having a sibling caused problems (that wouldn't have been there even without the siblings). The one caveat is that I have worked with families where the parents were overwhelmed and struggling to parent and more kids can make that harder. It's just logistically challenging and not everyone is cut out for it. But even with this, it is often other issues (financial difficulties, marital problems) that are the true source of the problems. Not simply the existence of another child.
I really haven't seen any evidence that having or not having siblings is itself a deciding factor for raising well-adjusted kids. I might even go so far as to say it's irrelevant in most cases.
I pretty much agree with this. The one thing left out in this analysis, though, is how only children fare as adults. I have actually met several only children who felt lonely and had a really hard time with aging and dying parents. And having gone through this with both my and my husband’s parents, we agree that having siblings is very helpful and important in this stage of life.
I hate my (violent, mentally ill) closest in age sibling, and he was a consistent net negative throughout my childhood. But my oldest siblings are incredibly important to me as an adult. This factored into our decision whether to have more than one child.
And yet, there are many people whose siblings didn't help at all or made the situation so much worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Is this the teacher? What grade do you teach?
IME working as a counselor with kids of various ages, it's common for preschool and early elementary kids who are onlies to wish they had siblings, but way less common to hear this from tweens and teens. Little kids want siblings because they want built-in playmates.
Some families are dysfunctional, and an only child in a dysfunctional family might long for a sibling, who they envision as an ally in navigating family challenges. But my observation is that in dysfunctional families with siblings, it rarely works that way. The sibling relationships wind up being dysfunctional as well. It's just hard and lonely being in a dysfunctional family -- it being larger doesn't ease that and could make it worse in some cases.
But in functional families, tweens and teens who are onlies virtually never talk about wanting a sibling. By this age they see some of the advantages of being an only and they no longer crave a playmate. Teens tend to highly value independence and crave being treated more like adults as they near actual adulthood. Only children in functional families (so no overbearing parents or couples using their child as a go between or anything like that) tend to get both of those things. I've never encountered a child for whom being an only caused problems. Nor have I met kids for whom having a sibling caused problems (that wouldn't have been there even without the siblings). The one caveat is that I have worked with families where the parents were overwhelmed and struggling to parent and more kids can make that harder. It's just logistically challenging and not everyone is cut out for it. But even with this, it is often other issues (financial difficulties, marital problems) that are the true source of the problems. Not simply the existence of another child.
I really haven't seen any evidence that having or not having siblings is itself a deciding factor for raising well-adjusted kids. I might even go so far as to say it's irrelevant in most cases.
I pretty much agree with this. The one thing left out in this analysis, though, is how only children fare as adults. I have actually met several only children who felt lonely and had a really hard time with aging and dying parents. And having gone through this with both my and my husband’s parents, we agree that having siblings is very helpful and important in this stage of life.
I hate my (violent, mentally ill) closest in age sibling, and he was a consistent net negative throughout my childhood. But my oldest siblings are incredibly important to me as an adult. This factored into our decision whether to have more than one child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Is this the teacher? What grade do you teach?
IME working as a counselor with kids of various ages, it's common for preschool and early elementary kids who are onlies to wish they had siblings, but way less common to hear this from tweens and teens. Little kids want siblings because they want built-in playmates.
Some families are dysfunctional, and an only child in a dysfunctional family might long for a sibling, who they envision as an ally in navigating family challenges. But my observation is that in dysfunctional families with siblings, it rarely works that way. The sibling relationships wind up being dysfunctional as well. It's just hard and lonely being in a dysfunctional family -- it being larger doesn't ease that and could make it worse in some cases.
But in functional families, tweens and teens who are onlies virtually never talk about wanting a sibling. By this age they see some of the advantages of being an only and they no longer crave a playmate. Teens tend to highly value independence and crave being treated more like adults as they near actual adulthood. Only children in functional families (so no overbearing parents or couples using their child as a go between or anything like that) tend to get both of those things. I've never encountered a child for whom being an only caused problems. Nor have I met kids for whom having a sibling caused problems (that wouldn't have been there even without the siblings). The one caveat is that I have worked with families where the parents were overwhelmed and struggling to parent and more kids can make that harder. It's just logistically challenging and not everyone is cut out for it. But even with this, it is often other issues (financial difficulties, marital problems) that are the true source of the problems. Not simply the existence of another child.
I really haven't seen any evidence that having or not having siblings is itself a deciding factor for raising well-adjusted kids. I might even go so far as to say it's irrelevant in most cases.
Anonymous wrote:Most only children want a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:However, only children tend to be smarter than kids with siblings
Source: I'm a teacher.