You have to wonder why, when the US Census reports that the single child family is the fastest growing family unit, people tell you to have another child, or you think you should. Those proponents of large or larger families claim your only child will be spoiled, lonely or selfish. These social stereotypes and others date back to the 1890s and have no basis in fact, if they ever did. It is parenting style more than the number of siblings that influences how an only child -- or any child for that matter -- turns out.
Turning on the Pressure
So when someone, perhaps your mother-in-law or friend, tells
you need to have another child, here are the real facts about
only children and the myth of misfortune that wrongly still
surrounds them. The facts are based on decades of new
research.
Myth: Only children are aggressive and bossy.
Fact: Only children learn quickly that attempting to run
the show, a ploy that they may get away with at home, doesn't
work with friends and a bossy, aggressive attitude is a quick
ticket to ostracism from the group. Lacking siblings, only
children want to be included and well liked.
Myth: Only children prefer more solitary, non-competitive
amusements because they are alone a great deal of the time.
Fact: This preference has more to do with social class
than family size. The interests in these amusements stem from
parental values and the home environment of middle- and
upper-middle class families, which are more likely to have a
single child.
Myth: All only children have imaginary companions to
compensate for their loneliness.
Fact: There is no scientific evidence. Jerome Singer,
PhD, professor of psychology and child study at Yale
University, confirms that the imagination required to create
make-believe friends "is not the exclusive property of the
'only' child, the isolated, the ill or the handicapped.
Imaginary friends serve a purpose of meeting a need-to confront
loneliness, to combat a fear, or to compensate for feelings of
weakness in relation to adults or older children." Any child
can feel that need.
Myth: Only children are spoiled.
Fact: Being spoiled is a reflection of our society. The
Chinese feared they were raising a generation of "little
emperors" when their only child policy was in effect. Looking
back 20 years later they found the only children were not
particularly spoiled and found no difference in only children's
relationships with friends when studied with children who had
siblings.
Myth: Only children are selfish.
Fact: Every child at one time or another believes the
world revolves around him. "Selfish means you are thinking of
yourself as opposed to others," explains Michael Lewis,
professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at the Robert Wood
Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, New Jersey. "The
youngster who is unable to take the view of another is going to
appear selfish. There are points in people's lives, one of them
being adolescence, when the energy is withdrawn. Hormonal
changes and physical growth during that time may be
particularly harsh and the energy to focus on others just isn't
there."
In the absence of siblings, parents cultivate the tools of sharing and feeling for others and are the best early teachers because of trust and faith children have in their parents. All parents can expect their toddlers and teens to act selfishly at times.
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