
Anonymous wrote:I'm on the outside looking in here. My DH's cousin's wife clearly favors her first born. It is blatant and kind of sad.
I just wonder how his only sibling will grow up feeling.

Anonymous wrote:True to the Latino legacy of misogyny/blatant male privilege, my Cuban mother clearly favored/favors my brother (I'm a woman). I started doing laundry at eleven - she washed his until he left home. His only chore was taking out the trash. She totally babied him, whereas I had to grow up quickly.
Sucks, but this is quite common in Latino households.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was always painfully aware that my younger sister was the favorite. Yes, it sucked. What kind of advice are you looking for here?
Anything I can do? I mean does it really help to get a bunch of attention from an "aunt" when you are 1.5 and your mother is ignoring you in favor of her golden child?
No, it won't fix it, but it still will be valuable. I was the very unfavored child and my life was very quiet bc my mother never spent any time talking to me or being with me. I would have really benefited if I had a mentor or favorite aunt or uncle or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is interesting for me as the parent of two very different children. The older one has had health issues from birth and is twice exceptional (gifted and learning disabled); and the second is healthy and above average in everything.
I find myself spending so much more time with DC1, and I hope I have explained enough and shown my love to both enough, that DC2 will understand why I need to do this, and not see it as a slight. The gestures and thoughts of daily life are so difficult for DC1, while DC2 can take care of himself so competently. I am also afraid DC1 will resent me for being so trusting of DC2, who is organized and handy, whereas I constantly check on motor-challenged and forgetful DC1 for spills, lost items, time spent on various tasks, etc...
I tell them I love them every day. I hug them tight. I encourage them to bond and play. I hope I'm doing enough. But I can't parent them the same way.
Nope. A kid can't not understand it in the adult level you expect.
Your child became an expert I taking are of himself because he had to.
Dc2 believes DC1 is the favorite and sadly his organized and handy behavior probably stems from his own idea that if he is just perfect, you will love him.
+1
+2 I've seen this dynamic over and over again. You need to set aside one-on-one time for DC2.
Sadly, this is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is interesting for me as the parent of two very different children. The older one has had health issues from birth and is twice exceptional (gifted and learning disabled); and the second is healthy and above average in everything.
I find myself spending so much more time with DC1, and I hope I have explained enough and shown my love to both enough, that DC2 will understand why I need to do this, and not see it as a slight. The gestures and thoughts of daily life are so difficult for DC1, while DC2 can take care of himself so competently. I am also afraid DC1 will resent me for being so trusting of DC2, who is organized and handy, whereas I constantly check on motor-challenged and forgetful DC1 for spills, lost items, time spent on various tasks, etc...
I tell them I love them every day. I hug them tight. I encourage them to bond and play. I hope I'm doing enough. But I can't parent them the same way.
Nope. A kid can't not understand it in the adult level you expect.
Your child became an expert I taking are of himself because he had to.
Dc2 believes DC1 is the favorite and sadly his organized and handy behavior probably stems from his own idea that if he is just perfect, you will love him.
+1
Sadly, this is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is interesting for me as the parent of two very different children. The older one has had health issues from birth and is twice exceptional (gifted and learning disabled); and the second is healthy and above average in everything.
I find myself spending so much more time with DC1, and I hope I have explained enough and shown my love to both enough, that DC2 will understand why I need to do this, and not see it as a slight. The gestures and thoughts of daily life are so difficult for DC1, while DC2 can take care of himself so competently. I am also afraid DC1 will resent me for being so trusting of DC2, who is organized and handy, whereas I constantly check on motor-challenged and forgetful DC1 for spills, lost items, time spent on various tasks, etc...
I tell them I love them every day. I hug them tight. I encourage them to bond and play. I hope I'm doing enough. But I can't parent them the same way.
Nope. A kid can't not understand it in the adult level you expect.
Your child became an expert I taking are of himself because he had to.
Dc2 believes DC1 is the favorite and sadly his organized and handy behavior probably stems from his own idea that if he is just perfect, you will love him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep. My brother was totally The Golden Child. He didn't fall from grace until his mid 30's when he married a shiksa who didn't fall all over herself sucking up to my mother.
My mom made him special meals on the first day of school but not me, she ALWAYS took his side when he and I were fighting, when he would do something wrong she'd punish and then let it go whereas with me she's STILL bringing up that thing I broke in 1981, etc.
It's annoying. My brother admits he was her favorite. I was my grandma's favorite. My mother won't admit it or that she treated him better. Whatever.
Poor classless bitter you.
Anonymous wrote:Yep. My brother was totally The Golden Child. He didn't fall from grace until his mid 30's when he married a shiksa who didn't fall all over herself sucking up to my mother.
My mom made him special meals on the first day of school but not me, she ALWAYS took his side when he and I were fighting, when he would do something wrong she'd punish and then let it go whereas with me she's STILL bringing up that thing I broke in 1981, etc.
It's annoying. My brother admits he was her favorite. I was my grandma's favorite. My mother won't admit it or that she treated him better. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was always painfully aware that my younger sister was the favorite. Yes, it sucked. What kind of advice are you looking for here?
Anything I can do? I mean does it really help to get a bunch of attention from an "aunt" when you are 1.5 and your mother is ignoring you in favor of her golden child?