Pegging the proper place
for the stand-alone child Parents must protect
themselves and learn to let go while teaching
their only one to share
By Karen
S. Peterson
USA TODAY
Every
child grows up with the trappings of his birth
order, the stereotypes frequently used to define
him. The oldest child is the go-getter. The
middle child is the negotiator. The youngest is
the joker who gets attention by making others
laugh.
And the
only child -- common wisdom says he can be
selfish because he has no siblings to compete
with: He gets all of Mom and Dad's attention.
Stereotypes
can be cruel and untrue. But they often contain a
grain of truth. Parents do want to be aware of
the pitfalls when they are raising an only child,
experts say.
The
biggest concern is a self-centeredness created
through ''overindulgence,'' says Carolyn White,
who runs a Web site for the families of
singletons, www.onlychild.com.
Parents
can easily devote too many material things and
too much attention to their one child, she says.
Larger families ''have so much more going on in
their lives, for better or for worse. They do not
have the only child who is the main focus of
attention.'' Such intense attention can also be
stifling for a child, she says.
Socialization
and siblings
It is
harder to teach kids about sharing ''if there is
not a built-in mechanism for teaching it, if
there are no siblings at home who demand to share
the toy,'' says Jane Annunziata, co-author of Why
Am I an Only Child? ''The peer issue is a big
one: Parents must be extra mindful to give these
kids from babyhood opportunities to interact with
peers.''
Susan
Newman, mother of a singleton and author of Parenting
an Only Child, says savvy parents are careful
now to socialize their onlies early, taking them
to play dates with peers and bringing in other
adults with children. ''Parents realize it is
important to build in a support system,'' she
says. ''They bring in friends who act as family
members.''
Singletons
tend to be more mature, more intelligent at an
early age, and more ''socially and verbally
precocious'' because they spend so much time with
adults, says child psychologist Carl Pickhardt,
author of Keys to Parenting the Only Child.
But being singletons also can cause children to
''think of themselves in terms of being equal to
their parents'' or other authority figures.
For the
same reason, they can expect too much of
themselves, Pickhardt says. ''They believe they
should do things as well as their parents.''
Other
problems focus on separation. ''Only children
tend to be closely bonded to their parents,'' in
part because they spend so much time together, he
says.
''How
does the child literally separate himself, see
himself as different from his parents,'' at
different ages, especially ''separating at
adolescence and then again at early adulthood?''
Pickhardt says. ''Then they feel they are leaving
their parents bereft.''
Separating
from singles
While
some experts emphasize that onlies have trouble
separating from their folks, it is more often the
other way around, says Alexis White, 20, a
singleton and a junior at the University of
California at Los Angeles. She responds to some
of the traffic on her parents' Web site.
''It can
be almost impossible for the only child to get
out of that triangle,'' she says. ''Parents have
a terrible time letting go. They don't want them
to go away for college. They want them to
commute.''
To avoid
such over-involvement, Annunziata says, the
parents must actively preserve their couplehood.
''The family often runs like a pack: mother,
father and child,'' she says. ''Parents want to
make sure to preserve Mom and Dad as a unit.''
Parents
of onlies often suffer guilt trips for not giving
their child a sibling. Stop it, Alexis White
says. ''If parents are so guilt-ridden, that will
be manifested in the child's mind and affect his
or her happiness.''
It is
normal for an only child to want a brother or
sister sometimes, experts say. Annunziata wrote
her book with Marc Nemiroff to answer a common
question from young children: ''Don't you like me
enough to want to have another child?'' The
book's answer is ''Every family has its own right
size.''
Nemiroff
is the parent of an only child. He headed off
such questions by dealing with his son's onliness
right from the beginning. ''He would tell us
about so-and-so who has a baby brother, and we
would ask him what it was like not to have one.
We asked him if he had any questions about it.
That normalized it very much for him.''
The
other end of life poses dramatic problems for the
threesome, says Charles White, who runs
www.onlychild.com with his wife. There is only
one child to deal with aging parents. ''Elder
care is just a very important issue.''
He plans
to beef up resources on his Web site but cautions
parents to plan ahead.
Even
with their specialized problems, most onlies are
just as happy and well adjusted as kids from
larger families, experts say.
Susan
Newman's son, Andrew Levinson, 17, echoes the
feelings of many:
''Having
an only child is more of an answer for families
today. You don't have to have two or three
children to be complete.''
Some
help deciding
Still,
parents might like to go ahead and have more than
one child. Among the questions Susan Newman
suggests in her book that parents ask themselves
when weighing the decision:
* How
will a second child affect my marriage?
* How
will our family life change?
* Am
I prepared to give up my love affair with my
firstborn? Can I avoid being partial if I have
more than one?
* What
are the cost implications of another child?
* Will
I need to move to gain more space for a second
child?
* Can
I juggle the logistics of increased child care?
* Am
I getting too old to have a second child? Are
there medical issues?
* How
will another child affect my personal freedom?
* Am
I having a second child for the right reasons, or
for reasons such as saving my marriage or
answering my child's request for a baby brother?
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