Monday, March 6, 2017

Sibling Spacing: Waiting 3 or More Years



Our Readers Ask:

My husband and I have been thinking about having a second child, but our first child, now 2 and ½, just seems like such a baby still; we are thinking about waiting another year or more, but wonder if we are making a mistake, since everyone we know seems to be having their second child already!



There are several common reasons people have their children close together. There are parental age and fertility concerns. Parents may want to get the really tough, sleepless years over with sooner than later. Those who liked having a little baby may miss that stage when they encounter the more complex demands of toddlerhood. Some parents want their children to be close in age to foster closeness between the siblings.

It is important to try to tune out the “everyone is doing it” mentality. There are several reasons it may be preferable to wait more than 3 years to have your next child.

A child over 3 who has mastered the art of going to school by himself, or of tolerating longer periods of separation from his mom, is on his way to achieving an important psychological milestone: object constancy. This refers to the ability of a child to keep his mother in mind at all times, even when she is not present, as a comforting and loving figure inside his mind.

The main experience young children have when new babies are born is one of both real and imagined loss—real in the sense that Mommy’s time and energy are divided, and imagined in the sense that all children worry their mom has chosen the baby over them, has brought the baby into the family as a replacement, has lost interest in the first child—or worse, has rejected the first child because they are bad. Even children in the most loving and secure families have thoughts like these. A child who is closer to achieving object constancy (usually not fully developed until age 5!) is more able to balance these thoughts with other thoughts: “My mommy still loves me and cares about me”; “I am special and could never be replaced.”

But, your friends say, my child has been separating from me at daycare every day since she was 3 months old, and still seems to be securely attached: she must have object constancy, even at the age of 2! We think there is a difference between having a healthy attachment and having truly achieved object constancy. Young kids with working moms adapt to separations primarily by attaching to surrogate figures during the day. They do retain a sense of mother, and a knowledge she will return. But the birth of a sibling is an emotional challenge of a different order. The child with incomplete object constancy is less sure of the stability of mother’s love and positive regard for them. Negative thoughts ring louder and truer, and the positive thoughts that mitigate them are harder to access. The child with more complete object constancy has a better chance of mentally surviving, and developing a tolerant and even loving orientation toward the baby. This is no small matter.


Of course, the main factor in how a child achieves object constancy is the security of the attachment between mother and child. A child whose mother is sensitive and attuned to their difficulties in becoming an older sibling, who takes time out every day to do pleasurable things alone with her first born, and who makes that child feel special, is better off than an only child whose mother does not make these efforts.  

-- Dr. S & Dr. G