Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, my family choices really aren't impacted by an 8 year olds opinion. My kids are 6ywara apart and adore each other. The older one remembers being lonely and waited and waited for my younger one to be able to play. Now at 3 and 9 they love each other.
What do they play together?
Anonymous wrote:We have a 7.5 year old only, and I just found out I’m pregnant. I’m terrified I am ruining my child’s life by bringing this new baby into the picture. DC absolutely LOVES being an only, and has never wanted a sibling. I already have an appointment with my therapist next week, but in the meantime can people share positives of massive age gaps? Happy stories, ways it was awesome, things you did that made it good. Thank you!
(I can think of all the negatives myself, please don’t add to it!)
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, my family choices really aren't impacted by an 8 year olds opinion. My kids are 6ywara apart and adore each other. The older one remembers being lonely and waited and waited for my younger one to be able to play. Now at 3 and 9 they love each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know you asked for positive stories, but I feel I need to be real with you hear because it might help you. My sister and I are 8 years apart with me being the younger sister. WE get along find now as adults, not so much as kids, part of this is due to the age gap and part of this is because my parents forced my sister to be happy about it.
I think things probably would have gone more smoothly if they had accepted she may not be excited about it, and not try to force her into the big sister role.
Let your oldest child have their feelings.
Try to keep as much of their routine and life the same as possible.
This is good advice! I have two female cousins with this age gap, and growing up the older one really seemed not to want to do anything with the younger one, and we thought of her as a mean and bossy older sister. However upon reflection we realized that she was being forced into a role she didn't really want at the time. I think their relationship improved greatly when she went away to college, and then came to the US for grad school, and she was free of the pressure of being a big sister/ missed her family.
Fast forward several years, and the two are really close and have really been there for each other. The older one supported the younger one in emigrating to the US. The younger one recently divorced (25-year marriage) and her sister has been a rock through all of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your 8 yo should be really engaged in her own life -- school, activities, friends - and the new baby doesn't need to change her existence that much. Maybe only one parent can come to some of her events instead of two, but that's fine. And yes, reminder, you are the parent and you make the decisions. Your 8 yo has NO VOTE on whether or not you are going to expand your family.
And the parents have NO VOTE of their son daughter likes their sibling or if the siblings get along and become best friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your 8 yo should be really engaged in her own life -- school, activities, friends - and the new baby doesn't need to change her existence that much. Maybe only one parent can come to some of her events instead of two, but that's fine. And yes, reminder, you are the parent and you make the decisions. Your 8 yo has NO VOTE on whether or not you are going to expand your family.
And the parents have NO VOTE of their son daughter likes their sibling or if the siblings get along and become best friends.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, your 8 yo should be really engaged in her own life -- school, activities, friends - and the new baby doesn't need to change her existence that much. Maybe only one parent can come to some of her events instead of two, but that's fine. And yes, reminder, you are the parent and you make the decisions. Your 8 yo has NO VOTE on whether or not you are going to expand your family.