Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for responses so far! I am so glad to hear these positive experiences. One thing I do worry about a little is the fact that DH and I are not super social (I’m an introvert, he’s a lazy extrovert in his words). Our DD is also on the shy side— very outgoing at home but extremely shy around others.
Any experience with socializing an only when the parents aren’t that outgoing? We always assumed we’d be one and done but now I worry we are setting DD up for a lonely existence.
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.
HA! I spit my water out with that one. You have no idea what your kids' relationship will be when you're dead, and you'll never know, since you'll be dead. This is such a dumb thing to say.
Also, way to truck in the "only children are self-centered and selfish" stereotype. My only child is incredibly generous -- paying attention to what her friends are interested in, constantly thinking about what gifts her friends would like, always willing to share, and very good at working out compromises with her friends. She's flexible and adaptable, and gets along with almost everyone. Only kids have a pretty strong incentive to get along with others, because your parents can make your siblings include you and play with you, but they can't make other kids do that.
And there are plenty of people who had siblings, who are self-centered and unable to compromise. My SIL has siblings, and she's a nightmare of self-centeredness and selfishness. Siblings don't make you selfless, and being an only child doesn't make you selfish. If anything, I'd say that personality and parenting have more to do with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The greatest gift you can give your child is a sibling.
The dumbest thing you can ever say is this.
Anonymous wrote:I really don't think "how your children are handling Covid" is the right metric for whether or not to have more kids. Families of all stripes are struggling right now, and factors like where you live and how much disposable income you have are as likely, if not more, to impact how easy or hard it is as the number of children.
I love having an only. I sometimes get baby fever, especially when I'm hormonal or when I see photos of a good friend's new baby. But for me, one kid is the perfect balance. Our family feels complete.
The pros for me are: having more money, being able to stay in the home we love instead of moving for space, having fewer variables when making family decisions, being pretty "portable" as a family, and always being to give each other a break.
It's hard to list drawbacks in the same way. I think the biggest challenge is that when you only have one, you are always a first-timer. That means you make mistakes, but it also means you never really get to feel like an authority as a parent. I've noticed people gain confidence with each subsequent child, and there must be something kind of nice about being BTDT and getting to learn from your mistakes. With an only, you never really get that. Sometimes other people also dismiss your parenting experience, too ("you only have one"). But honestly, that's really not enough to outweigh the benefits. In a way, I like it because it keeps me from making "mother" my core identity. It's a huge part of who I am, but it's not everything and I like that my daughter sees that, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best-there is only one (she has a number of special needs) and parenting is exhausting.
Worst-I feel sad that she does not have siblings and that kind of connection.
PP again, and there is no guarantee that siblings will be close or even like each other or have anything in common.
Anonymous wrote:The greatest gift you can give your child is a sibling.
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.
HA! I spit my water out with that one. You have no idea what your kids' relationship will be when you're dead, and you'll never know, since you'll be dead. This is such a dumb thing to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah but it’s feeling like you won the lottery is what makes them all grow up into self centered jerks.
In my experience, only children are actually very generous and good at sharing, because they are confident that they have or will get enough. They don’t have to fight for resources at their home. My kid has given away so many toys because the other kid just wanted it — and it’s hard to chastise him for that! Although I did teach him that he should check with me before offering and the other kid should check with a parent before accepting.
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.
This. We have many friends with multiple kids. Some of their kids are great, some are not. We know one family in particular with three kids, and their oldest is a spoiled brat. We had them over for a party last year and he walked up to me and told me our party wasn't fun for him because we didn't have any of the cool stuff his friend's families have (he goes to a private and many of his friends are from very wealthy families). And he's 9, so well past the age where that kind of behavior is more acceptable because kids need to learn basic manners.
The truth is, most of the "pitfalls" of only children can be addressed by thoughtful parenting, just as the same is true with multiple kids. If you don't set limits for kids, they don't learn to accept them. If you don't reinforce manners and kindness and empathy, they don't develop them. Siblings are not some magic bullet that will solve parenting for you. You still have to... be a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah but it’s feeling like you won the lottery is what makes them all grow up into self centered jerks.
In my experience, only children are actually very generous and good at sharing, because they are confident that they have or will get enough. They don’t have to fight for resources at their home. My kid has given away so many toys because the other kid just wanted it — and it’s hard to chastise him for that! Although I did teach him that he should check with me before offering and the other kid should check with a parent before accepting.