The relationship between siblings is the longest most people will have in their lives. With intention, it can be a source of lifelong support — not just rivalry.
Preparing for a New Sibling
Read books about new siblings. Involve the older child in setup. Avoid major changes (potty training, room moves) right before/after the birth. Manage expectations: “The baby will mostly sleep, cry, and eat at first.”
The First Weeks
- Arrange so the older child meets the baby outside the parent’s arms.
- Carve out 1:1 time daily, even just 15 focused minutes.
- Validate complicated feelings: “It’s hard to share Mama with someone new.”
- Don’t force affection — let bonds form naturally.
Reducing Rivalry
Avoid comparing (“Why can’t you be more like…”). Don’t label kids (“the smart one,” “the athletic one”) — both feel boxed in. When fights happen, coach problem-solving instead of dictating (“You both want the toy. What’s a fair plan?”). Step in only for safety.
Fairness vs. Equality
Fair doesn’t mean identical. Each child needs what they need. “I love you both completely, just differently” is more honest — and more reassuring — than constantly measuring.
Leave a Reply