Anonymous wrote:I have 5 children, they share and compete and hug and argue and are absolutely there for each other no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:The only time I ever noticed was when I went on a weekend with my friend, and I forgot my toothpaste, so I asked to borrow some. She let me, but then she also let me know that the front desk would also have toothpaste i could get from them... which... I mean, yes, but it was just surprising to me. But I get it, it is a personal care item.
I'm a middle and HATE sharing my food, even with my husband. I mean, if I get a snack and he wants to eat several bites, it drives me nuts.
These are super inconsequential things. I don't think it seriously matters.
Anonymous wrote:I have 5 children, they share and compete and hug and argue and are absolutely there for each other no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:Parents of an only child think they are so profoundly amazing it’s a bit much. The only child has never had to share the spotlight or learn to compromise because of a sibling’s competing demands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I won't say that I can generally tell, but once I find out, things about their personalities often start to make more sense. For example, the only children I know often demand a lot of attention from their friends. They soak up attention and are needy and often can't deal when the spotlight is on someone else. They want to quickly refocus attention back on themselves.
Complete opposite experience. Kids from big families didn’t get enough attention unless they demanded it, so now they demand it… All. The. Time
This is my experience as well. They didn't learn to share, they learned to compete.
Anonymous wrote:I have 5 children, they share and compete and hug and argue and are absolutely there for each other no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I won't say that I can generally tell, but once I find out, things about their personalities often start to make more sense. For example, the only children I know often demand a lot of attention from their friends. They soak up attention and are needy and often can't deal when the spotlight is on someone else. They want to quickly refocus attention back on themselves.
Complete opposite experience. Kids from big families didn’t get enough attention unless they demanded it, so now they demand it… All. The. Time
Anonymous wrote:I won't say that I can generally tell, but once I find out, things about their personalities often start to make more sense. For example, the only children I know often demand a lot of attention from their friends. They soak up attention and are needy and often can't deal when the spotlight is on someone else. They want to quickly refocus attention back on themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Generally very selfish because they never had to share.
Anonymous wrote:Yes if I really think about it. The adult onlies I know tend to be more comfortable doing things on their own and less emotionally needy. Even if they have mental health issues or other problems (everyone has problems), they do not seem to need as much validation as my other friends or have as much need for an audience. I do also think onlies are less willing to compromise with others. That can be very annoying but I also admire it at times— the ones in my life tend to get what they want (and exactly what they want) a lot more often than I do, and I try to take notes because I’m often a doormat.
I am a middle child and very different than this. I have a deep fear of being disliked and overlooked, and I tend to overcompensate by talking a lot and being very accommodating of others.
I personally have found that youngest children (especially “the babies” — people younger than their siblings by more than a year or two, especially in large families) are the biggest challenge personality wise. The neediness of a middle child combined with the entitlement/demanding attitude of an only.
The eldest really varies IME.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As kids I definitely can (although it’s often the hovering, overbearing parents that give it away). As adults it depends on their lived experiences.
+1. It’s usually the parents of only kids I don’t like. I was visiting a friend (mom to an only) and we decided to go out to dinner. We all sat around waiting as her 12 year old daughter made the decision as to where we would go. The girl absolutely runs their house.