By ALEISHA MCCORMACK
Why are you an only child? Were you lonely? Do you have some sort of congenital illness? Are you the consequence of a one-child policy? Are you Chinese?
Ah, the questions. The never-ending questions.
I don’t mind answering them, it the stereotypes that really bore me.
Spoilt. Lonely. Anti-social. Pu-lease.
That look that people give you when you say you are sans sibling, like they’ve just remembered where they left their keys in 1997. Annoyance and relief that they’ve ‘figured you out’. It all makes sense! They’re maladjusted. Phew.
I have a friend who has created a fictional brother who is ‘overseas studying*’ to avoid the stigma of being an only. Extreme? Yes but it works.
(*He’s studying biochemical engineering and he will be away for a LONG time)
I didn’t often long for brothers and sisters, I longed for the life everyone thought I was leading. Over-attentive parents, rooms overflowing with toys, a happy little family unit. We moved a lot. I went to 16 schools by the time I was 11… I made friends quickly and lost them ever quicker. I learned to adapt.
I had an eventful childhood (great for stand up comedy) but it was no picnic. Would a brother or sister altered my path? In fashion and music… perhaps.
I didn’t have a sister to tell me that my green velveteen turn up hat (girlfriend style) with a flower in the middle was awful or to get hand me down clothes from.
Top Comments
Like everything else, I think there is pros and cons. I was the only child and I don't think I was spoiled. If anything, I matured and learnt to be independent and focus on my own things in life, with no other siblings there to distract me. My only regret is that I wished I had a close sibling to interact with during teenage years as they were my toughest years. Now I have 3 boys of my own. Some days I envy them because they seem to have so much fun and some days I think to myself "why did I?"
As a fellow 'only', many of your comments resonate with me Aleisha. I never felt lonely as a kid but like you I was fascinated with other people's big families and chose my boyfriends accordingly. I had an amazing relationship with my parents and never felt like I was missing out on anything. I was certainly never spoilt & I don't think I was a brat. I was (and still am) very happy with my own company.
However, when both my parents died while I was in my 20s I suddenly yearned for a sibling to share my grief and my history. I felt like I had become the sole guardian of family memories and that was hard.
Despite facing major issues conceiving again after my first daughter was born, I was desperate to provide her with a sibling and was lucky enough to do so when she was 7. By the time the 2nd child was 10 her sister had moved out so she got some time as the only child at home. In a strange twist I then fell unexpectedly pregnant again at 45, 12 yrs after my second child! So now I have three children who have all spent time as 'onlies' but also have siblings for support. It was unintentional but I feel like they got the best of both worlds.