Anonymous wrote:As a parent of older kids, who also has done years of volunteering for an organization that serves young adults with a variety of special needs, I want to encourage you to think very long term. Assume the 2nd child is NT. What responsibilities of care will you have placed on them without their consent to care for their sibling? In my volunteering, I met many incredible, loving siblings, but it is a huge responsibility, and they did not sign up for it. Something to keep in mind.
Anonymous wrote:There are companies now that offer IVF genetic screening to reduce the risk of polygenic diseases (eg. ADHD, T1D, etc.) . If you can afford it, it might be worth looking into.
Anonymous wrote:My only child is in early elementary and has moderate-to-severe ADHD. He can be a handful in ways that I understand most kids aren’t. He is both hyperactive and inattentive, with a dash of defiance and a particularly low frustration tolerance, but the last two items seem to only show themselves at home.
DH and I both commute to work five days a week with no close by family. In addition, we have therapy appointments, are currently having recurring meetings with school to figure out special accommodations, and I am trying to be better about participating in activities to get his energy. We are stretched.
We likely would have tried for a second when he was younger, if it wasn’t for COVID. When COVID first started when he was aged 3, he was not displaying all of the behaviors we see now. As he got older, they started becoming more apparent, and it became clearer that this is something that we need to deal with as parents.
I think if COVID had not hit when he did, he would have a sibling and we would be juggling the needs of our son and the sibling who may or may not face the same challenges.
I am likely coming to the end of my ability to have another kid (late 30s), but it pulls at me that we don’t have a second, even though we are just holding it together now. Having kids so far apart in age also seems to introduce more logistical challenges because they will never go to the same school or participate in the same activities.
Who has been in a similar situation? What choice did you make?
Anonymous wrote:Life doesn’t always turn out as planned. I would focus on your family and move on from the idea of a second. You’ll all be happier in the long run if you’re not stretched too thin raising two only children.
Anonymous wrote:We have one kid with ASD1 who is 5yo. She is doing really well now, though there was a period between age 2 and 4 that was really hard.
DH knew early on, before DD was born that he probably wouldn't want another. I was more interested in having 2 and definitely wanted another right after DD was born (probably somewhat hormone driven). I eventually accepted that since DH didn't want another and I have fertility issues, that another kid is not in the cards for us.
Now that DD has her ASD diagnosis I realize both DH and I may have some ND traits. Definitely both have issues with executive functioning and anxiety. And that helps me realize that while other families may do fine with 2 kids, we probably would not. Having a young child has been hard on our marriage. I get overwhelmed easily and DH shuts down. Not a good combo. It is so much better now that DD is older, and I think another baby would just be really hard. I have learned to appreciate what we have and stop feeling like we "should" have had another.