Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
There is something very wrong with you if your plan is to refer to them as her half brothers. They’re not half people.
Well what kind of explanation do you propose for why they live with some other woman most of the time?
“Daddy and Carla are M and J’s mommy and daddy. Then daddy and I had you together.”
That’s literally all it takes. Toddlers accept their reality with very few questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
There is something very wrong with you if your plan is to refer to them as her half brothers. They’re not half people.
Well what kind of explanation do you propose for why they live with some other woman most of the time?
“Daddy and Carla are M and J’s mommy and daddy. Then daddy and I had you together.”
That’s literally all it takes. Toddlers accept their reality with very few questions.
So is being a half sibling some sort of shameful, stigmatizing fact that must be tiptoed around and never spoken aloud?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
There is something very wrong with you if your plan is to refer to them as her half brothers. They’re not half people.
Well what kind of explanation do you propose for why they live with some other woman most of the time?
“Daddy and Carla are M and J’s mommy and daddy. Then daddy and I had you together.”
That’s literally all it takes. Toddlers accept their reality with very few questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
There is something very wrong with you if your plan is to refer to them as her half brothers. They’re not half people.
Well what kind of explanation do you propose for why they live with some other woman most of the time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
There is something very wrong with you if your plan is to refer to them as her half brothers. They’re not half people.
Anonymous wrote:Our plan was to teach her the difference between brothers - John and Jim are brothers. They have the same parents. John and Jim are your half brothers because you have the same dad.
At such a young age, it just didn't come up. Everyone has a name, and she didn't understand that grandma is also jane. She think's grandma's name is grandma. It is now that she has questions about what a family is, how everyone relates, where everyone lives, etc.
Anonymous wrote:^^^ adding that we gained custody when the twins were 3. The big kids see their mom a couple weeks a year and for twins know her name and know that she is their mom.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine how the parent who created all 3 of these children hasn’t once called them all “siblings” or “brothers”.
Someone is dropping the ball on creating relationships. And it’s the adults in this case.