Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My best friend has an only child. She may not notice it because this is her only frame of reference but her son is self centered and unable to deal with any compromise relating to his desires. I have 5 children that share, laugh, fight, compromise, apologize and are incredibly loyal to one another. When we are gone they will have each other’s backs and that is priceless.
1. You don’t know what your kids’ relationships will be like as adults. I hope they get along, but many, many people do not get along with their siblings as adults.
2. Kids can be self-centered in sibling situations just as easily as in one-kid situations. Don’t generalize.
Let me elaborate on number 1: Again, I hope it’s different in your case, but with the exception my sister and I—who have a decent relationship, but are hardly as close as we were as kids—no one in my extended family has close sibling relationships. My dad and his 3 sisters barely talk to one another. My mom hates her brother. My husband has a non-existent relationship with his brother. My FIL is not in contact with his siblings.
You can say that all of these people have problems, but more likely it’s just that many people aren’t close with their siblings as adults.
Yeah you can’t predict how close siblings will be. My younger brother is one of my best friends and confidants. I can’t imagine my life without him!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have an only myself, but friends with onlies are DESPERATE right now during COVID. (Obviously this won’t last forever though). They are the ones I know putting their kids in camps or other activities so their kids can have some socialization.
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1. Camps and most activities are not very risky.
2. We are not DESPERATE. Please stop.
My friends with multiple kids are the desperate ones, they’re going crazy trapped in the house with whining fighting kids and trying to coordinate two distance-learning schedules at once. It’s been easy breezy for us, to the extent that I am embarrassed about how calm and happy our lockdown has been… when my friends talk about this stuff I am quiet about our experience and try to focus on being sympathetic for the theirs, because it sounds terrible.
I was wondering how long it would take until we got to this. No one is better off than anyone else. It's just different. Stop bashing people just because their circumstances are different than yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t have an only myself, but friends with onlies are DESPERATE right now during COVID. (Obviously this won’t last forever though). They are the ones I know putting their kids in camps or other activities so their kids can have some socialization.
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1. Camps and most activities are not very risky.
2. We are not DESPERATE. Please stop.
My friends with multiple kids are the desperate ones, they’re going crazy trapped in the house with whining fighting kids and trying to coordinate two distance-learning schedules at once. It’s been easy breezy for us, to the extent that I am embarrassed about how calm and happy our lockdown has been… when my friends talk about this stuff I am quiet about our experience and try to focus on being sympathetic for the theirs, because it sounds terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My best friend has an only child. She may not notice it because this is her only frame of reference but her son is self centered and unable to deal with any compromise relating to his desires. I have 5 children that share, laugh, fight, compromise, apologize and are incredibly loyal to one another. When we are gone they will have each other’s backs and that is priceless.
1. You don’t know what your kids’ relationships will be like as adults. I hope they get along, but many, many people do not get along with their siblings as adults.
2. Kids can be self-centered in sibling situations just as easily as in one-kid situations. Don’t generalize.
Let me elaborate on number 1: Again, I hope it’s different in your case, but with the exception my sister and I—who have a decent relationship, but are hardly as close as we were as kids—no one in my extended family has close sibling relationships. My dad and his 3 sisters barely talk to one another. My mom hates her brother. My husband has a non-existent relationship with his brother. My FIL is not in contact with his siblings.
You can say that all of these people have problems, but more likely it’s just that many people aren’t close with their siblings as adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of 14 year old only child here. We thought we wanted two and tried for a second one when DD was 3, but I was NOT excited to test and was glad it was a negative. That gave me a clue that maybe one child was the right number for us. While I am extroverted, DH is introverted and DD is a nice mix. She likes us and she likes her friends. Pros are that money is not an issue and my DH has been able to scale back from a job he really hated during COVID to help out with distance learning and cooking/cleaning. We will be able to fully fund college and we sent DD to a private school through 8th grade. Also, we have more time for each other, for exercise, for eating healthy, and for our own hobbies. I learned to play clarinet as an adult and joined a band which was fantastic until COVID hit. I'll be able to go back to it, I hope, soon. Our home is loving and calm, mostly conflict-free and we don't think anyone is missing from our family.
Challenges have been personal for me, I think. Mainly that I give DD too much and, while she is mostly better for it, I do worry that she may have more difficulty transitioning to adulthood. For example, it's not that hard to toss her laundry in with ours so we tend to just do that. Or just clear her plate with mine, vacuum her room with mine etc. We have forced her to do chores from time to time, but with Distance Learning, she actually hasn't had a lot of time. So sometimes I think it's ok we do these things and other times I worry she has too much done for her. Another example is that I sense she feels pressure to please me. I pay attention to her, which is both a wonderful thing and a terrible thing. One of the blessings of multiple children is that each child can fly under the radar here and there. DD can't do that. Just like most situations, the good parts are the same as the bad parts. More money means less stress and possibly less motivation. More attention means greater success and possibly anxiety.
I don't think there is any one right answer, but I do think that a loving, committed, attentive parent is required. I knew two kids would be too much for me. I'm the breadwinner so I wanted to know that I had enough for both parenting and working. For me, that meant one kid.
It's been wonderful saying yes to DD--music lessons, dance, sleep-away camp where she blossomed, trips, tutoring, etc. That's my favorite part. I love seeing how confident and happy she is in her own skin. I love that she can come to me when she is feeling bad and know I will lift her up. I am there for her all the time and she knows it and feels it. Is that occasionally bad? Possibly?
When I was uncertain, I gave myself about 6 months to push any thoughts of a second from my mind and just focus on DD. It gave me real clarity to realize at the end of that 6 months, I didn't want another child. I've wistfully thought "what if?" from time to time (I'm 46 now), but I never changed my mind. DD has said she enjoys being an only, but truthfully she is a happy child and would have been fine either way, which I knew. This was my and DH's decision.
I wish you peace in making your decision. There is not a wrong answer so long as you and your partner are on the same page.
A lot of this is parenting. Our only will take our plate or we take theirs. Not a big deal as we all help each other out.
Anonymous wrote:Parent of 14 year old only child here. We thought we wanted two and tried for a second one when DD was 3, but I was NOT excited to test and was glad it was a negative. That gave me a clue that maybe one child was the right number for us. While I am extroverted, DH is introverted and DD is a nice mix. She likes us and she likes her friends. Pros are that money is not an issue and my DH has been able to scale back from a job he really hated during COVID to help out with distance learning and cooking/cleaning. We will be able to fully fund college and we sent DD to a private school through 8th grade. Also, we have more time for each other, for exercise, for eating healthy, and for our own hobbies. I learned to play clarinet as an adult and joined a band which was fantastic until COVID hit. I'll be able to go back to it, I hope, soon. Our home is loving and calm, mostly conflict-free and we don't think anyone is missing from our family.
Challenges have been personal for me, I think. Mainly that I give DD too much and, while she is mostly better for it, I do worry that she may have more difficulty transitioning to adulthood. For example, it's not that hard to toss her laundry in with ours so we tend to just do that. Or just clear her plate with mine, vacuum her room with mine etc. We have forced her to do chores from time to time, but with Distance Learning, she actually hasn't had a lot of time. So sometimes I think it's ok we do these things and other times I worry she has too much done for her. Another example is that I sense she feels pressure to please me. I pay attention to her, which is both a wonderful thing and a terrible thing. One of the blessings of multiple children is that each child can fly under the radar here and there. DD can't do that. Just like most situations, the good parts are the same as the bad parts. More money means less stress and possibly less motivation. More attention means greater success and possibly anxiety.
I don't think there is any one right answer, but I do think that a loving, committed, attentive parent is required. I knew two kids would be too much for me. I'm the breadwinner so I wanted to know that I had enough for both parenting and working. For me, that meant one kid.
It's been wonderful saying yes to DD--music lessons, dance, sleep-away camp where she blossomed, trips, tutoring, etc. That's my favorite part. I love seeing how confident and happy she is in her own skin. I love that she can come to me when she is feeling bad and know I will lift her up. I am there for her all the time and she knows it and feels it. Is that occasionally bad? Possibly?
When I was uncertain, I gave myself about 6 months to push any thoughts of a second from my mind and just focus on DD. It gave me real clarity to realize at the end of that 6 months, I didn't want another child. I've wistfully thought "what if?" from time to time (I'm 46 now), but I never changed my mind. DD has said she enjoys being an only, but truthfully she is a happy child and would have been fine either way, which I knew. This was my and DH's decision.
I wish you peace in making your decision. There is not a wrong answer so long as you and your partner are on the same page.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A LOT of parents of multiple kids in this thread for parents of only children, talking about how bad it is to have an only child.
Y'all are telling on yourselves.
Yup.
My favorite part is the person who assumes we must be hiding something because we say we’re happy.
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That’s not what she said. She said that all scenarios have their cons which is true.