Just discuss it with them in a civil manner that you and kid feels this way and its causing grief so please be more mindful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. DH’s sibling and the two children in question are all the same gender and there is no specific “shared interest” to explain this.
Why did you say siblings? And be honest about your kids. Do they act the same? Do they bicker relentlessly? Do you favor one over the other and are they taking out the black sheep to try to make up for it because you have an obvious Golden Child? I don't believe it's random and they flipped a coin and picked one.
Normally there is a reason - favorite one is:
Male
Better looking
Good athlete
Smart
Humor
Remind the person of themselves
Lest favorite might remind them of negative qualities in themselves
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting to me because I grew up in a big family with lots of siblings, cousins, aunts, and uncles. There were definitely special/closer relationships that popped up between certain pairings in the group. One uncle was closest with the sister who played basketball. One aunt favored the cousin who wanted to shop and talk fashion. One seemed to just like the oldest cousin she’d known longest. Etc. We all just saw it as normal.
So to me, the situation you describe is completely normal and I would not make a big deal out of it with the brother. I would consider it my job to help my kids put it in perspective.
But what about family members who go on a trip and bring back a small trinket for only two out of 5 kids? Not because of a special shared interest, just a simple t shirt.
Or give $10 at a holiday for just two kids? And they are not poorer than the others, they have the same or more money and material things.
Talking about special interests and getting along better is different.
Anonymous wrote:Toward one of your children, how do you handle?
I have two children, same gender, and husband’s siblings show a very clear noticeable favoritism. The less-favored child definitely notices, cares, and doesn’t understand.
My instinct is to withdraw from that person, but they live locally and my kids like their cousins/that person’s children.
But it’s a very sucky situation.
And no we aren’t imagining it or being dramatic.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting to me because I grew up in a big family with lots of siblings, cousins, aunts, and uncles. There were definitely special/closer relationships that popped up between certain pairings in the group. One uncle was closest with the sister who played basketball. One aunt favored the cousin who wanted to shop and talk fashion. One seemed to just like the oldest cousin she’d known longest. Etc. We all just saw it as normal.
So to me, the situation you describe is completely normal and I would not make a big deal out of it with the brother. I would consider it my job to help my kids put it in perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. DH’s sibling and the two children in question are all the same gender and there is no specific “shared interest” to explain this.
Why did you say siblings? And be honest about your kids. Do they act the same? Do they bicker relentlessly? Do you favor one over the other and are they taking out the black sheep to try to make up for it because you have an obvious Golden Child? I don't believe it's random and they flipped a coin and picked one.
Anonymous wrote:
The MIL of one of my siblings does this. I see it with her own children where she favors one son over the other kids.
This has carried through to the grand kids. She favors one child in each family. I find it to be really unpleasant and harmful. If I can avoid seeing her, I do. The grand kids are now adults and all the cousins talk about it.
Anonymous wrote:Get over it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is interesting to me because I grew up in a big family with lots of siblings, cousins, aunts, and uncles. There were definitely special/closer relationships that popped up between certain pairings in the group. One uncle was closest with the sister who played basketball. One aunt favored the cousin who wanted to shop and talk fashion. One seemed to just like the oldest cousin she’d known longest. Etc. We all just saw it as normal.
So to me, the situation you describe is completely normal and I would not make a big deal out of it with the brother. I would consider it my job to help my kids put it in perspective.
This isn't favoritism. That's just relationships. Favoritism involves treating someone poorly while favoring another. You're missing the part where someone is treated poorly over and over and over. That's the part that's painful, not the part where others have a good relationship.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. DH’s sibling and the two children in question are all the same gender and there is no specific “shared interest” to explain this.
Anonymous wrote:
The MIL of one of my siblings does this. I see it with her own children where she favors one son over the other kids.
This has carried through to the grand kids. She favors one child in each family. I find it to be really unpleasant and harmful. If I can avoid seeing her, I do. The grand kids are now adults and all the cousins talk about it.
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting to me because I grew up in a big family with lots of siblings, cousins, aunts, and uncles. There were definitely special/closer relationships that popped up between certain pairings in the group. One uncle was closest with the sister who played basketball. One aunt favored the cousin who wanted to shop and talk fashion. One seemed to just like the oldest cousin she’d known longest. Etc. We all just saw it as normal.
So to me, the situation you describe is completely normal and I would not make a big deal out of it with the brother. I would consider it my job to help my kids put it in perspective.