Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People forget that twins are two individuals who are like any other siblings, just with more in common due to more shared experiences. Let them be their own people, don't force them to live a life of conjoined twins. Don't put one twin between other twin and his/her/their spouse.
Well identical twins also share genes, which goes way beyond shared experiences.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious what the moral is here…make sure twins attend different colleges? Have different friend groups in HS?
…or you want them to be attached for life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I knew two twin women who shared one job. They lived together, traveled together. You always saw them together (in the workplace). It seemed like they considered themselves one person. It seemed odd, but was how they went through life.
One is dead now, but I am not close enough to inquire about how the survivor is managing.
twin means two. so you say ' a set of twins' or twin women. Not two twin women
Anonymous wrote:People forget that twins are two individuals who are like any other siblings, just with more in common due to more shared experiences. Let them be their own people, don't force them to live a life of conjoined twins. Don't put one twin between other twin and his/her/their spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Identical twins are a special case. It's hard for those of us who were singletons, or even fraternal twins, to imagine what it's like to have a genetically identical sibling. So be careful with the judgment.
Judging the parenting not the twins. I work with identical twins and once you get past their physical characteristics, they are very different and "not the same person".
They both have said their parents and family always treated them as one. Parents thought it was "cute" to keep them as "twins" always.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a strange and judgemental thread. There is nothing wrong with this and it's none of your business. They are adults.
Anonymous wrote:Are they happy?
Having lived through several friendships and failed relationships and now in a shitty marriage, I'd take a reliable, fun, joyful sibling relationship any day.
Don't fix what's not broken, OP. Love is a gift in any form.
Anonymous wrote:If you have adult twins, how separate are their lives? My 27 year olds don't have very separate lives. They went to the same college and we insisted on different roommates for freshman year, but then they lived together the other 3. They got an apartment post grad and recently bought a house together. They both have great jobs in totally different fields (one is a nurse practitioner and one is a CPA) but otherwise mostly just stick to each other. k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have twins, but my sister is married to an identical twin. The twins went to the same college; where my sister met her husband. They married right after college. The other brother had a brief marriage, but basically is a third wheel to my sister’s family. He is at their house most weekends or during the week. Sometimes they all vacation together, or the vacation alone. The other brother sometimes joins our side of the family for the holidays. The brothers are a matched set and we all accept that.
Why? Is there some reason a twin gets a pass vs just a sibling…or would the sibling get the same treatment?
Anonymous wrote:I have b/g twins (or I should say m/f bc they are adults). They are early 20’s - one just graduated college and the other is taking a bit longer. They are best friends. They do get annoyed with each other. One still lives with us and the other lives a few hours away. I love seeing their bond bc both dh and I do not have close relationships with our siblings.
Op, it is so hard for young people to make connections. I think it’s great your kids have each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious what the moral is here…make sure twins attend different colleges? Have different friend groups in HS?
…or you want them to be attached for life?
Moral is that each twin deserves to be an individual and their romantic partner shouldn't feel like third wheel. Having a strong bond with a sibling (twin or not) doesn't mean becoming an extra appendage to them.
You should read One and the Same by Abigail Pogrebin about identical twin relationships. Tiki Barber is an ID twin and in the book he states that his wife and his twin's wife were made aware and agreed that the brothers' relationship was very important, and as important as the marriages, and the wives needed to be on board with that.
https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2009/10/tiki-ronde-barber-excerpt-200910#:~:text=%E2%80%9CLet%20me%20answer%20it%20this,we're%20still%20one.%E2%80%9D
"All three Barbers I spoke to tiptoe around the question of how the wives handle the twinship. “Let me answer it this way,” says Geraldine. “Do they understand it? I’d say, ‘Not totally.’ Do they respect it? Definitely.”
“When we’re all together, it’s a great foursome,” Ronde says. “But at the end of the day, we all know who’s making the decisions. It will come down to what Tiki and I want to do, because that’s the Relationship. So you figure out the psychodynamics of that … “
Tiki echoes him: “I think our bond is the strongest it’s ever been and the strongest bond that there possibly is. Greater than marriage. I’m closer to Ronde, without a doubt. And that will never change.” I tell each Barber that some twins’ relationships have struck me as a kind of love story and I wonder if they find that’s a fitting analogy. Ronde nods. “We see beyond who we pretend to be. I know who he really is, he knows who I really am, and if you were writing a love story, that’s what it would be. All those romantic ideals—‘conquers all,’ ‘stands the test of time’—yes. That’s certainly the case with us.” Tiki agrees that twinship is “a perfect intimacy.”
“It starts from the zygote splitting and one destined person becoming two,” he continues. “And while we go our separate ways in life and our experiences vary, at the end of the day, we’re still one.”