Anonymous wrote:All I want for christmas is a sibling for my daughter.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Okay, fine. Share away. Came across as presuming and superior to me, as though I am not handling my situation with "resilience and grace.". And yes, saying "you get what you get and don't get upset IS belittling, and uber obnoxious. Different people have different ways of dealing with these situations, and platitudes don't help.
Well, if you were the PP who wrote:
Wow. You are a grade A cunt. Probably good you can't have more kids. Don't fucking tell me how to feel bitch - you don't know me, my family, or my situation, nor do you know how we are handling it. So FUCK you.
then, yes, I would say you are not handling it with "resilience and grace."
Anonymous wrote:
Okay, fine. Share away. Came across as presuming and superior to me, as though I am not handling my situation with "resilience and grace.". And yes, saying "you get what you get and don't get upset IS belittling, and uber obnoxious. Different people have different ways of dealing with these situations, and platitudes don't help.
Wow. You are a grade A cunt. Probably good you can't have more kids. Don't fucking tell me how to feel bitch - you don't know me, my family, or my situation, nor do you know how we are handling it. So FUCK you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry and I understand these are all very real feeling but I think everyone gets tired of hearing this refrain from the granny moms of America. I realize many people have other issues that prevent them from having more kids, but it is really tiresome coming from the oldsters. When you are old our body can't make children as easily. Not a mystery.
I am not old. An RE told us that everything for both of us checked out great as far as hormones; I can't carry again because of severe uterine scarring.
So again, another mean-spirited bitch making assumptions about total strangers on the internet. I don't know why I am surprised.
OP, ignore these cunts. Feel sad if you need to. It's normal and it will get better. It has been getting better for me but it is still hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know what you mean, and it's ok to feel sad. I do too. But what can you do about it? This is just one of the things in life that we can't control. You get what you get and you don't get upset. And try to remember, there were probably hours of fighting to get that picture of them holding hands.
Maybe YOU don't get upset, but some of us do. As a PP said, some us do NOT feel that our families are complete. In my case, my son desperately wants a sibling and we very much want another child. We cannot have another biological child on our own. It has been very, very difficult for all of us. Please don't belittle how other people feel. It's not helpful.
I don't think it's belittling someone's feelings to say that you have to learn to deal with not getting what you want. I want my child to learn how to handle disappointment with resilience and grace, which means I have to model that for her. There are many things I want that I can't have, and I choose how to deal with that. I can focus on how sad I am and on what I am missing, or I can focus on what I do have and be grateful for that. What I do have is a loving husband and a beautiful little girl. I don't want my family to be about a person who doesn't even exist. When she asks for a sibling, I don't want to feed her sadness, which means I can't feed mine.
Again, you don't know me or how I'm handling it, nor do you know how OP is handling it. Lots of projection here from mean spirited people.
There was actually no projection or mean-spiritedness by the PP above you. She doesn't say a thing about how you should handle your situation. People are sharing their experiences - it is not all about you.
Anonymous wrote:For those that are (or know) adult siblings who are not close, how are their relationships with their parents?
The adult families I know, it's not just the siblings who aren't close, it's the whole family. And, from what I've seen, it's because the parents weren't particularly emotive with their feelings, which left the kids being that way too.
I've never met a family where all the adult siblings have a great relationship with their parents, yet the siblings do not with each other. Except for some sort of major incident that tears them apart later, like lending a brother money that never gets returned or something like that that causes an immediate problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know what you mean, and it's ok to feel sad. I do too. But what can you do about it? This is just one of the things in life that we can't control. You get what you get and you don't get upset. And try to remember, there were probably hours of fighting to get that picture of them holding hands.
Maybe YOU don't get upset, but some of us do. As a PP said, some us do NOT feel that our families are complete. In my case, my son desperately wants a sibling and we very much want another child. We cannot have another biological child on our own. It has been very, very difficult for all of us. Please don't belittle how other people feel. It's not helpful.
I don't think it's belittling someone's feelings to say that you have to learn to deal with not getting what you want. I want my child to learn how to handle disappointment with resilience and grace, which means I have to model that for her. There are many things I want that I can't have, and I choose how to deal with that. I can focus on how sad I am and on what I am missing, or I can focus on what I do have and be grateful for that. What I do have is a loving husband and a beautiful little girl. I don't want my family to be about a person who doesn't even exist. When she asks for a sibling, I don't want to feed her sadness, which means I can't feed mine.
Again, you don't know me or how I'm handling it, nor do you know how OP is handling it. Lots of projection here from mean spirited people.
Anonymous wrote:Eh. I have three kids and they never hold hands. Last week my youngest shoved my oldest so hard he wound up with a bloody mouth. If it'd make you feel better I can have them re-create that moment, photograph it, and send you the card to balance out all that hand-holding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get what you get and you don't get upset.
This is the most inane expression. First of all, it is fine to feel upset, there is no reason to deny the feeling - you just can't let it take over your life. Second, and more importantly, how does this stupid saying help kids to realize that there are things (having a sibling not being one of them) that you can advocate for, get upset about, and change?
+1
And for some of us, this news is still fresh. It feels like a death. Would you tell someone dealing with a family member's death to.just get over it? I'm not wallowing, but it is hard. And if other people's sadness makes you feel mean, self-righteous and angry, I feel fucking sorry for you.
Only having one child feels like a death?!!?!? God, I feel sorry for YOU. And your poor child, who has to deal with a parent who is a complete drama queen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get what you get and you don't get upset.
This is the most inane expression. First of all, it is fine to feel upset, there is no reason to deny the feeling - you just can't let it take over your life. Second, and more importantly, how does this stupid saying help kids to realize that there are things (having a sibling not being one of them) that you can advocate for, get upset about, and change?
+1
And for some of us, this news is still fresh. It feels like a death. Would you tell someone dealing with a family member's death to.just get over it? I'm not wallowing, but it is hard. And if other people's sadness makes you feel mean, self-righteous and angry, I feel fucking sorry for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that are (or know) adult siblings who are not close, how are their relationships with their parents?
The adult families I know, it's not just the siblings who aren't close, it's the whole family. And, from what I've seen, it's because the parents weren't particularly emotive with their feelings, which left the kids being that way too.
I've never met a family where all the adult siblings have a great relationship with their parents, yet the siblings do not with each other. Except for some sort of major incident that tears them apart later, like lending a brother money that never gets returned or something like that that causes an immediate problem.
My brother and I aren't close, but I'm extremely close to my parents, who were always openly affectionate and loving.