Anonymous wrote:My DH has a sister. She is currently in jail and has addiction issues. I have a sister and we're not close at all, we're more like acquaintances as adults. We don't provide any support to each other. I get that from my spouse and my close friends.
I know this doesn't help you much, but I think you're idealizing what it's like to have siblings. My child is an only child and I worry a little about how he'll navigate eldercare, but hopefully he'll have a spouse or partner for support and we make sure we are setting everything up to make it as easy on him as possible.
How does not having a sibling cause you to feel like you're completely alone in the world?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m only interested in hearing from other adult only children. Particularly moms with small children. How do you manage feelings of loneliness? Jealousy of friends and even your spouse who have built-in support? I’m generally very positive but every time I go through a milestone (having a baby, baptism, 40th birthday, parent illness, etc) I’m reminded of how ALONE I am in the world. Yes, I have friends. I’m very involved in my community. But at the end of the day, everyone else has family to count on. To plan and host events. To travel with. To navigate caring for aging parents with. My parents are elderly. I have no aunts/uncles/first cousins.
Therapy.
I have siblings and aunts. We’re estranged due to significant abuse issues. I will never have a “real” or helpful mom, sister, aunt. I too feel totally alone. I have no extended family to count on — I actually have to actively prevent them from stealing from me or abusing my children. It totally sucks. It’s not an only child thing, though.
This is OP. I think you’re probably right. As I’m reading through these responses, I’m realizing it probably isn’t an only child thing. It’s more of a no extended family to count on thing.
Exactly. I have a sibling, but not one I can count on for anything and both of my parents are dead. Neither of my parents were close to their families, both left them and moved far away so I didn't grow up close to family. So now it's essentially me, DH, our kids for blood family, and my friends. Although being a working mom of two young kids with an hour commute doesn't leave much time for nuturing friendships.
It is tough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it OP. I’m also an only and I have a full life with friends, community, family etc. Still, whenever we spend time with my DHs siblings I see their rapport, I feel a sense of loss. It’s really nice to have extended family.
I have no words of advice, just commiseration. My parents aren’t elderly yet, but I also dread being the only one to deal with their support when the time comes.
Thank you for this. I feel very few people truly understand.
Anonymous wrote:I’m only interested in hearing from other adult only children. Particularly moms with small children. How do you manage feelings of loneliness? Jealousy of friends and even your spouse who have built-in support? I’m generally very positive but every time I go through a milestone (having a baby, baptism, 40th birthday, parent illness, etc) I’m reminded of how ALONE I am in the world. Yes, I have friends. I’m very involved in my community. But at the end of the day, everyone else has family to count on. To plan and host events. To travel with. To navigate caring for aging parents with. My parents are elderly. I have no aunts/uncles/first cousins.
Anonymous wrote:I am an only child with an only child.
I don't feel at all like you do, OP. My parents barely has enough emotional and financial wherewithal for one child, much less two.
All my life I have built communities to sustain me. My DH was by my side when my parents needed help
Anonymous wrote:I’m only interested in hearing from other adult only children. Particularly moms with small children. How do you manage feelings of loneliness? Jealousy of friends and even your spouse who have built-in support? I’m generally very positive but every time I go through a milestone (having a baby, baptism, 40th birthday, parent illness, etc) I’m reminded of how ALONE I am in the world. Yes, I have friends. I’m very involved in my community. But at the end of the day, everyone else has family to count on. To plan and host events. To travel with. To navigate caring for aging parents with. My parents are elderly. I have no aunts/uncles/first cousins.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a 39 year old only child with two seven year old kids and a husband. My dad passed when I was 26, and my mom is still alive. She's 62 now and healthy. The pros of not having a sibling is there is no one to have to agree with when it comes to elder care. I have a great relationship with my mom and my nuclear family. I have a ton of close girl friends, and we travel together. I don't feel lonely at all.
Anonymous wrote:Op, I think the reality is that this adds up to you just can't have it all.
I have a big family and I would feel as you do if I was an only child. Having siblings is a great experience and having nieces and nephews and aunts and uncles is amazing. We do lots of big family get togethers, and extended family is a really important part of our lives.
However I wasn't able to have kids myself. So I don't get the experience of family that you have. It creates a different kind of loneliness and separation from others. Like you, I have lots of other good in my life but I think everyone has something that makes them lonely - be it no siblings, no spouse, no children, a terrible marriage, geographic isolation etc. We all have burdens and crosses to bear of things over which we don't have control and life is really about acceptance, grieving our losses, being resilient and focusing on what we do have.