I’m at least a fourth generation only child (me, dad, grandma, her mom…), and so I’m facinated by the concept of, well, ME!
A family with a single child is all for one and one for all. The children take on some of the characteristics of adults, and the adults take on some of the characteristics of children — though the child tends to be the focus of everyone’s attention, including his own.
The classic American idea about only children, nurtured in suburbs where two children could seem too few, is that they’re oddballs — coddled, spoiled, lonely. Raised without the camaraderie and competition of sibling society, they’re simultaneously stunted and overdeveloped — a repository of all their parents’ baggage.
A thoroughly unscientific culling of famous only children can suggest a certain kind of character, one who’s comfortable (sometimes too comfortable) creating his own weather, who is at home (sometimes too at home) with his or her own contradictions—and occasionally something of a megalomaniac…
For only children, that blessed sense of entitlement, where you’re always listened to and taken seriously…is at war with a sense of being smothered. The condition of being an only child gives one a lot to think about—and plenty of time to think.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
You're reading a page from the archives. Check the homepage for current content.
paisley jane
November 12th, 2004 at 10:50 pm
im an only
and it was lonely
chiekybaby
November 12th, 2004 at 11:02 pm
Just curious, did you like being an only child or did you want a sibling? (or didn’t care either way)
Ariel
November 12th, 2004 at 11:19 pm
Not only did I like being an only child, I’m a total only child bigot. I’ve been known to speak of onlies’ as a superior breed of humans, somewhat kidding, but sort of not.
chiekybaby
November 12th, 2004 at 11:52 pm
Hmm. Well, sounds good. It seems that my daughter will be an only child. While I love her to death and she’s totally fun, it’s can, of course, be a lot of hard work
Janece
November 13th, 2004 at 11:46 pm
I’m an only child. I loved it and never felt the lack for siblings. I never felt lonely. I just read an article this week in one of my children magazines that now proliferate my life that said so many of the negative stereotypes about only children are false. It also said the number of families choosing to have one child is on the rise.
I know I get that a lot. I tell someone that I’m an only child and they reply: “Well, there goes my theories about only children being ______!” (fill in the blank with negative stereotype of your choosing)
I’ve had an added interest in the topic lately because I’m strongly leaning towards Amira being an only child. We’ll see. Paul is *1 of 8* - so we come from quite different perspectives.
Reading the article - I don’t relate to it much. Either I had an unusual upbringing or those onlies in the article did.