In the middle
Encourage children not to compare themselves with their siblings and peers.
Rewa took my hand, lifted
it to her face and started to cry. I was aghast at her behaviour. She was sobbing
and repeatedly saying, “I tried so hard”. It took some effort and time to
quieten her.
Rewa had come to me because she was
concerned about her nine-year old son’s academic performance. I found the
little boy to be all right; he was of average intelligence. It was the mother
who had a problem — she was overly worried about her son. In her anxiety she
kept goading him to do better, believing that excellence in academics will make
him popular, loved and accepted by everyone around him. It had come to a stage
where the boy just did not want to try anymore. When I drew her attention to
this obsession, she burst out crying. She said all her life she had tried hard
to be accepted, loved and acknowledged, in vain. It was not the outsiders but
her own parents and siblings who ignored her. She had an older brother and a
younger sister. The parental affection was given to the eldest as he was the
first born, who had introduced them to the thrill of parenthood and the
youngest was cherished for she was the cutest child they would ever raise. She,
the middle one, simply got ignored. She had to do something extraordinary to
get the attention she desperately craved for.
It suddenly struck me that the
‘middle child’ syndrome is not a myth. It is real. If there are three kids in
the family and you are the middle one then the chances are that you might
constantly have to compete for family attention, try harder to be noticed, to
get parental attention at any cost. I remember my brother, a middle child, who
would do a headstand whenever the family entertained!
Low self-esteem
Studies show that the birth order
and the sibling relationship contribute to personality traits, self-esteem and
confidence. The middle child grows up in the shadow of his older sibling.
Always trying to emulate him, trying to follow the milestones set by him. He
gets too concerned about others’ opinion of himself. He often undervalues his
own worth and ends up with low self-esteem. The low self-esteem the middle
child experiences, makes him believe that every problem is somehow his fault.
He spends time and resources helping people who probably do not deserve it. His
problem is ‘being too nice’. Middle child syndrome does exist but with proper
care, a middle child can grow up to enjoy a virtually drama-free life, give or
take a few emotional outbursts.
It
is natural for kids to compare themselves to their siblings and peers. And as a
parent your challenge is to minimise sibling conflict and not aggravate it
further.
I
suggest that parents banish the word ‘comparison’ from their vocabulary. Your
child will pick up any comparison you make and despair at any shortcomings of
his own. This may lead to resentment and anger. Make a conscious effort not to
compare your middle child to his peer.
It would be wonderful if parents
could find one thing that makes their middle child feel special and highlight
it. Try and find a creative out-let for him.
Creative
expression will help him vent negative feelings and it also welcomes positive
attention. But do bear in mind that middle child is a master of manipulation
for he knows where he stands. Guard yourself against emotional blackmail.
Studies
show that the birth order and the sibling relationship contribute to
personality traits, self-esteem and confidence.
(The author is a remedial educator)
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