Photo by: D. Sharon Pruitt

Only Children are Doing Just Fine

Photo by: D. Sharon Pruitt

Well, I am at that point in my life where pretty much, if I am going to have a second baby naturally, I better decide NOW. And after many painful discussions with my husband regarding time demands, health demands, employment demands and financial demands, we decided to pass on baby number 2. This decision for me has been burdened with much guilt, angst, and a little anger (at whom, I am not so sure). Perhaps there are a few of you out there who are parents of “Onlies” and have felt the same way. I am posting this to not only tell you- you’re not alone, but that your feelings are normal (deeply ingrained in our society, in fact) and that our only children (despite popular beliefs otherwise) will be JUST FINE.

My friend, Marianne told me it was Karma when we were at the airport after nursing our hangovers at the VIP lounge when we found TIME magazine’s cover story was focused on this topic. We were picking up some water after talking about both our decisions to have only children when she picked up TIME’s cover story about only children being on the upswing in families. She waved it at me and said, “HERE! This is Karma! You need to read this on the plane!” And I did, and I am so glad I did. The studies they had and the explanations of the deep seeded need to “Go Forth and Multiply” was explained. Much was explained, actually, that made me realize where my own guilt was coming from. It allowed me to take an objective look at my life and realize what my husband has known for a while-one kid is all we can handle right now- and that’s OK. (Sometimes I envy the male species’ ability to look at things in a very practical manner without any emotional ties.)

The first thing the article did for me was to address where my own guilt was coming from, and where the pressures that society creates for you to have more than one child come from. I have consistently had a questioning look after being asked if I had kids – “So, only one? No more for you?”. Typically this followed with “Well, You should have more!” This never helped my aching heart as I struggled with my own pressures of wanting a second child, running out of time as I turned 40, and asking myself if I really should put added pressures on our finances, marriage and time by having another (not to mention health-two miscarriages before finally becoming parents and Crohn’s Disease meant a hard road to baby #2).

The article mentions that our society as a whole believes that having more children for the survival of our human race is in the very fabric of our being since the dawn of time. The more kids, the more chances for your family and bloodline to live on. Coupled with that is the need for early civilization to have “cheap labor” in a way. The more children you had, the more help you had around your homestead to work the land and make sure you had food on your table and a roof over your head. Having one child was considered for decades not only taking a “gamble” but flat out irresponsible-no matter what culture you were in. Of course, there are historic religious undertones to having more than one child, as well as economic that the article touches on-all of which started to clarify for me why I felt guilty as well as why others were pressuring me to grow my family.

The bulk of my guilt came from not giving my daughter a sibling. I wondered if she would be lonely, antisocial and spoiled without having the forced reality check of sharing a household with a sibling. An old friend of mine told me once, “You have the first for you to fulfill your need for Motherhood, the rest you have for them.” Now, I don’t think this is entirely true–but I think she was trying to boil down a thought here. And it was this thought that has been tugging at me. Also, I grew up with siblings, and my sister is one of my best friends. Yeah, it was chaotic at times to have a house full of kids. We had to learn to share and take turns and fight for our Mother’s attention. But when my parents pass on, I will always have a connection to my family because of my brother and sister. We also can share the care for our parents as they age so it doesn’t land on one person’s shoulders. If I have just one child, its all on that child. And when we are gone, will our daughter feel alone in this world?

Basically, it sounds like all my fears were for naught. The article sites some recent studies that actually prove that “Onlies” are thriving and very social. Because of the focused parental attention they get (socially and academically) as well as the lion’s share of the family resources behind them, they are growing up with high self esteem and very successful. The article blames a couple of old studies, one in the 1900’s and one in the 1980’s, that were done poorly but were the driving force behind the perception that only children are antisocial, loners, odd and weird. The new studies out actually show the opposite. That’s not to say there is a double edged sword. “Onlies” have more parental focus which means more demands and pressure. They also socialize and play with adults, which makes them have to grow up a little faster. But on the whole, our “Only” decision was not going to cause our daughter years of therapy and antisocialness in her life! That was a relief for me!

The other stunning fact is that “Onlies” are on the rise. With the economy bumping along, trying to recover, many families are taking a hard look at the costs of raising a family. With job security non-existent and the rising costs of pretty much everything, many families are just stopping at one, whether they really want to or not. I thought that was very interesting-and I did not feel so “alone” and “weird” in our decision.

If you are as pressured and confused as I have been about having a second child-know that you are not alone. Also, whatever you decide, do it because it is right for YOU and your family in all aspects-your happiness, your finances, your marriage, your time. Try not to listen to the outside pressures around you. I know I will try, too. Ironically just yesterday I had a cab driver asking if I had children, and I said I had one. And he said, “Ahh, you are nice, you should have more! You will have more, you’ll see.” This time, I chuckled and just shook my head at the irony of it all.

Here is the article in full if you want to read it-there are very interesting comments to it as well. Enjoy, and BRAVO TIME!

The Only Child: Debunking the Myths

Flora Caputo is a mom of a precocious daughter, a VP, Executive Creative Director and everything in between (including a blogger!). She grew up with “off the boat” parents from Italy, and it has contributed to a grounded, domestic foundation for her life. And she tries to balance that with a high-pressure career in advertising. From cooking, gardening and motherhood to business, marketing and career–join her journey to keeping it all together…as gracefully as possible!

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125 Comments

I was so happy to read this post. We both married later in life (me 35-hubby 42) and had a hard time conceiving--finally 4 yrs laters, after the moving of my fibroids, we had our precious son. People kept saying "come on have another" but I was overwhelmed with one. So now he's 4 and I'm 44 . . . we talked about adoption but it's too expensive! I do feel guilt, but then at the same time we are so happy. Then I saw the Life Mag article and I feel better. Hubby is okay with it too...

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I haven't seen the Time article yet, but plan to check out its research references. BOTH of my parents were only children and had NO idea how to bring up their own three children. They had NO understanding of sibling rivalry; no comprehension of family birth order and how it affects individual children; no system by which to allocate their time and attention evenly between the children, and no ability to adjudicate arguments neutrally or disseminate resources fairly...

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Thank you for this article. I have been feeling the guilt lately. I am a single parent with one son and I can tell he gets lonely sometimes. When we go out and he sees other kids, his face lights up. At restaurants, he leaves me to go sit with other families with children. LOL. We have a cat and they actually squabble and fight over toys...

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Bless you my fellow mamma of 1! I've been feeling the pressure from the in-laws, friends & EVEN co-workers to have another! Geesh! I too feel all the guilt you have, I'm so glad you posted this - I breathed a BIG sigh of relief when I read this!

Great article! As one out of 20 friends who only has one toddler, the unspoken (and sometimes spoken) pressure to have 2 is enormous! I'm always looking around to find families with only one child, or children with an age gap between to feel "normal". Worse, I find myself justifying why those families only have 1 ("they must have had pregnancy difficulties") and then I'm back to beating myself up for my choices ("I should have 2 since I don't have pregnancy difficulties")...

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What an amazing blessing all these voices are to me! I was 1 of 3 and am a mother to 1 very active 5 year old boy starting Kindergarten in a few days. My husband and I fell in love when I was only 18 and he was almost 25. I got married when I was 21 and though I don't regret it we had our son a little earlier than planned, due to my father in law being stricken with colon cancer. We desperately wanted him to know our child and he did...

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Good article. I come from a big family and my daughter is an only. I am concerned about her being alone when we are gone, but she has numerous cousins her age that she loves, so hopefully they will be "sisters" in their adult years. However, I have come from a large family and I can tell you that, much as I love my siblings, there is bickering about who shares in the care-taking and second guessing on care of elderly parents, etc...

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Actually, they are missing a big part of the picture. THe children will grow up and be alone. When their parents are sick or dying, they'll have no siblings to support them. I know a man who felt really alone when his parents died and he had to plan the funeral alone. He hated it.
Also, from the other side, if you put all your eggs in one basket, so to speak, and that child dies, even as a young adult, the parents miss out on so much. My oldest son died at age 8...

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I hear a lot of people talk about onlies and the decision to have only one but people never mention that often it's not a choice the parents make. My husband and I have a beautiful daughter who came years and several miscarriages after we would have liked and now baby #2 hasn't come so easily either. We may not have another child and if we don't we will have a perfect family of 3! It's a very personal issue for many people and no one knows what struggles any couple goes through to conceive...

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I have an only child, 11 yrs. old, and he's turning out fine. He's very social and well-adjusted. I, too, worried about it all so much when he was littler. Now I feel good about our decision. As far as havng another for the sake of the first: I am the youngest of three. I begged my mom for a little brother, and always wished I had one. Of course now as an adult I see that my parents could never have had a fourth child...

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I am thrilled with this article and intend to read the link to Time's as well. I went back and forth for several years about whether to have a second baby. For all of the mentioned reasons, we decided not to, and I have been very upset too. I finally realized though that instead of another baby I would really like to just go back in time to when my 'only' was an infant. So I just relive that special time through pictures and enjoy the age/stage we are at now!

AS one of seven children I know what it is to have siblings and extended family- the good and the bad. I also have what I would consider fair insight regarding when people should admit when to call it quits. With that said, we have one beautiful child and unless the Good Man upstairs has something to say about it she will be our only child.
I am the one to recognize this is our limit for many reasons while my husband turns a blind eye to circumstances...

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I was so happy to read this post! I especially idenified with Kelly's August 10th comment. I didn't meet the man of my dreams until I was 35. We tried to conceive on our own, then with fertility treatments, and finally adopted our beautiful son (6mos old) from South Korea. We had always wanted two children but knew we couldn't afford to adopt another. I was 39 when we adopted our son. A year later, I became spontaneously pregnant, and miscarried at 11 weeks...

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Thanks for your article. I was blessed to get pregnant when I was 40. Easy pregnancy, easy delivery. Beautiful baby girl. We have been trying ever since she was born (she is 4 now) to have another because I was terrified of her being an only child. I've tried to research the topic but haven't found much. Thanks so much for sharing your story and the Time mag article.

Hey, thanks! Good to hear stories from onlies....that people saw the downsides of having the sibling. I have only one. She is 4 and going off to preschool. The joy I am feeling of having her go off to meet new friends and because I will have a break from my very active daughter.....this is confirming to me that having only one is okay. I had PPD, I guess, and have a hard time thinking I would sacrifice 4 more years of my life to raise another little one...

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