Chosen7Stone
Member
I don't have children of my own (yet) but I've been working with children for 10 years.
With only ONE exception in the 100+ families I've worked closely with, those who had children too close in age had a more difficult (but not impossible!) time, and those who spaced them 2+ years had it a little easier.
There are a few reasons.
Now, I'm not saying spending time with your children is undesirable! But it's a lot easier to spend three months potty-training Child #1 and one month training Child #2, than dedicating 6-7 months total potty-training each separately. It's difficult enough to evenly divide your attention between your children, but you also want that time to be spent productively...like reading with them, playing with them, and just loving on them. The frustration of continuous, non-stop, one-child-after-another, month-after-month training and development focus can wear you down quickly!
A last example: It's not fun trying to feed two children at once, and many 1-2 year olds still need feeding attention, and you don't want to need to care for a newborn simultaneously.
With only ONE exception in the 100+ families I've worked closely with, those who had children too close in age had a more difficult (but not impossible!) time, and those who spaced them 2+ years had it a little easier.
There are a few reasons.
- Having children close-in-age is harder than having twins. At least with twins, they reach the same developmental stages at about the same time. With children born close together, one child is being potty trained, and the other one follows in short order. Every training/development stage you go through with child #1 is prolonged by child #2 being ready so soon after. Your attention is REALLY divided, more so than it needs to be.
- Child #1, because he/she does not yet have the independence that a 3-5 year old would have, does not serve as the example that most older children might. Usually, younger siblings pick up things like walking, talking, and potty-use pretty quickly because they're mimicking big brother/sister. If big brother/sister only recently mastered said skill, then the younger sibling is going to take just as long in the learning process, which also makes life a little more difficult for the parents, who again have to spend a lot of time on each child.
Now, I'm not saying spending time with your children is undesirable! But it's a lot easier to spend three months potty-training Child #1 and one month training Child #2, than dedicating 6-7 months total potty-training each separately. It's difficult enough to evenly divide your attention between your children, but you also want that time to be spent productively...like reading with them, playing with them, and just loving on them. The frustration of continuous, non-stop, one-child-after-another, month-after-month training and development focus can wear you down quickly!
A last example: It's not fun trying to feed two children at once, and many 1-2 year olds still need feeding attention, and you don't want to need to care for a newborn simultaneously.
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