GOODoldPAL
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2006
- Messages
- 210
Kristine - I'm happy you spoke with your husband about this and encourage you to occassionally revisit it with him. The "how many children" issue is important in a relationship. And whether you have one or ten children, the parent's relationship is THE foundation that will have the greatest impact on their early lives.
Funny thing is, I was on the other side of your experience many years ago.
My husband only wanted one and I soooo wanted a sibling for our only. Wow! So much guilt piled up feeling I was not providing for her needs! We too both came from large families (his 5 kids, mine 6), and so our extended family also happily heaped on the pressure too. The whole only child mentality was foreign to me (yes, it IS a different way of life).
Now, looking back I realize I was programmed from my life experiences to see a large family as THE perfect formula - and we want our children to have the perfect life right?
So how did I cope? Well I gave it to God. It was always up to Him anyhow, I just had to admit it.
Now I tell people, God decided if I had more than one I would probably accidently leave one in the grocery cart.
And of course God provided - just in a different way than I had in mind. For most of my DD's early years I had a home day care program and she had more kids to grow up with than I could ever bear, 12 hours a day! I volunteered with Girl Scouts and youth group and school or community events, and looking back, I can hardly remember a time I had less than 3 children in tow.
I came to realize that had I birthed more than one, I would never have had as much time or patience to give to those other kids.
Of course, thru the years she had her moments; holding me responsible for any momentary loneliness and literally begging for a sibling (girls can be soooo dramatic!). But more often she pointed out the inconveniences and uncomprehensible bickering of the siblings she knew.
Now, at age 13, even my DD can see how obviously God's plan unfolded:
Her experience as an only child has created a wonderfully empathetic, responsible and diplomatic young lady. While other kids are bouncing off the walls, she was always able to occupy herself and even whip up an activity to distract the others. She is always the one to take the new kid under her wing, and suggest an agreeable solution to social problems of her peers. She is like a magnet for little kids and always has a kind word and hug for them.
While I fretted she would turn out spoiled, she was giving away her lunch to the kid who forgot theirs!
And most important, especially in the fragile teen years, we talk. That seemed so inconsequential when she was younger but now I realize how different that is from my own childhood with a Mom who had to divide her time amongst many. When sex became a subject on the school bus (WAY too young IMHO), she would come home and get the facts straight with me. My DD tells me stuff about her classmates that makes my blood freeze; kids are dealing with so much crap these days. Mostly, I hear about teens that don't talk to their parents at all because they never developed a relationship with them where they felt loved and accepted. Some of her friends even confide in me.
Now, I'm not saying a good relationship with a child can't exist in larger families. And I'm not saying that my daughter wouldn't be a wonderful human being if she had siblings. But, God created us imperfectly and only He knows how to use those imperfections for good if you let Him. For me, I thought an only child was a curse and God revealed it as a blessing, not just for our family but the others who He placed in our life.
So cherish your time with your only. Maybe God plans to grow your family but maybe there is a reason, not yet revealed, why you are blessed with being able to focus on your son. Maybe it is the beginning of a plan God is unfolding for your family.
God always has a better plan for us than we could imagine.
Thanks for starting this thread and all those who shared their blessings.
Funny thing is, I was on the other side of your experience many years ago.
My husband only wanted one and I soooo wanted a sibling for our only. Wow! So much guilt piled up feeling I was not providing for her needs! We too both came from large families (his 5 kids, mine 6), and so our extended family also happily heaped on the pressure too. The whole only child mentality was foreign to me (yes, it IS a different way of life).
Now, looking back I realize I was programmed from my life experiences to see a large family as THE perfect formula - and we want our children to have the perfect life right?
So how did I cope? Well I gave it to God. It was always up to Him anyhow, I just had to admit it.
Now I tell people, God decided if I had more than one I would probably accidently leave one in the grocery cart.

And of course God provided - just in a different way than I had in mind. For most of my DD's early years I had a home day care program and she had more kids to grow up with than I could ever bear, 12 hours a day! I volunteered with Girl Scouts and youth group and school or community events, and looking back, I can hardly remember a time I had less than 3 children in tow.
I came to realize that had I birthed more than one, I would never have had as much time or patience to give to those other kids.
Of course, thru the years she had her moments; holding me responsible for any momentary loneliness and literally begging for a sibling (girls can be soooo dramatic!). But more often she pointed out the inconveniences and uncomprehensible bickering of the siblings she knew.
Now, at age 13, even my DD can see how obviously God's plan unfolded:
Her experience as an only child has created a wonderfully empathetic, responsible and diplomatic young lady. While other kids are bouncing off the walls, she was always able to occupy herself and even whip up an activity to distract the others. She is always the one to take the new kid under her wing, and suggest an agreeable solution to social problems of her peers. She is like a magnet for little kids and always has a kind word and hug for them.
While I fretted she would turn out spoiled, she was giving away her lunch to the kid who forgot theirs!
And most important, especially in the fragile teen years, we talk. That seemed so inconsequential when she was younger but now I realize how different that is from my own childhood with a Mom who had to divide her time amongst many. When sex became a subject on the school bus (WAY too young IMHO), she would come home and get the facts straight with me. My DD tells me stuff about her classmates that makes my blood freeze; kids are dealing with so much crap these days. Mostly, I hear about teens that don't talk to their parents at all because they never developed a relationship with them where they felt loved and accepted. Some of her friends even confide in me.
Now, I'm not saying a good relationship with a child can't exist in larger families. And I'm not saying that my daughter wouldn't be a wonderful human being if she had siblings. But, God created us imperfectly and only He knows how to use those imperfections for good if you let Him. For me, I thought an only child was a curse and God revealed it as a blessing, not just for our family but the others who He placed in our life.
So cherish your time with your only. Maybe God plans to grow your family but maybe there is a reason, not yet revealed, why you are blessed with being able to focus on your son. Maybe it is the beginning of a plan God is unfolding for your family.
God always has a better plan for us than we could imagine.

Thanks for starting this thread and all those who shared their blessings.