Siblings Are A Common Therapy Topic
Want to know what comes up quite a bit in my therapy room...Sometimes even more than parents? Relationships with siblings, or the relationship with being an only child.
So much around our growth, development, outlook on life, identity and our narratives are influenced around sibling order or being an only kid.
Where do you land in order of your siblings? Are you an only child? Do you have larger age gaps or are you Irish twins? Were you considered siblings though you were actually cousins? All of these questions are important to the therapeutic process.
Our siblings are our first friends, our first relationships. Our siblings can be our first physical and emotional wounds but our siblings can also be our fiercest supporters. We learn how to communicate, fight and live with our siblings before anyone else. We forget sometimes that we grow up and learn skills for the first time typically with your siblings around. So much of what happens when we are young with our siblings impacts how we are in relationship with them as adults. Family gatherings, parents wills, our roles as aunts and uncles, I could go on! *When we don’t heal, set boundaries and turn towards these precious relationships, wounds and uncomfy interactions will continue to build during moments that are so important; weddings, births, holidays, etc.
We would think sibling order would have more impact on our development than it actually does, which is fascinating! Sibling order is equivalent to where we are on the Myers-briggs, or our attachment style. It’s not as scientific as we typically believe.
We all know the stereotypes; The oldest is the most responsible, The middle is the peacemaker, and the youngest is the innovator. We’ve all heard it, But did you know, our personalities and how we live is more based on how our parents connection with our own individual temperaments? Not sibling order. Sibling order characteristics are an outcome to those parent-child relationship, not the other way around.
Maybe you are someone who needs to try a little harder, maybe you are someone who needs to build healthier boundaries, or maybe you are someone who needs to accept that your relationship with your siblings are gonna just be what it is and how to find joy in that dynamic. All of these areas can be hard. When we think about our relationships with our sibs it’s most important to work through whatever our stuff is so we can continue to have and build on what were some of our original relationships. The relationships that helped guide us and be who we are.
*HTW does not support cut off or cancel culture as a first step in relationships unless abuse is involved. We work towards healing, turning towards and repairing relationships first.
