View Full Version : The Plight of the Older Sibling


Madre
05-05-2008, 12:26 PM
The Plight of the Older Sibling

First-born kids really do have it tougher, new research finds

By Melissa Dahl

There are two Jones brothers, Joshua and Justin. But when something breaks — like the time a soccer ball crashed through a garage window — it’s usually Joshua who gets the lecture: You’re the oldest, his parents remind him. You need to set an example. Your younger brother is watching.

Now, a new study has confirmed what first-borns like Joshua have always suspected: The oldest kid in the family really does bear the brunt of parental strictness, while the younger brothers and sisters generally coast on through.

“The folklore is that parents punish the older child more than the younger ones,” says Lingxin Hao, a sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University and an author of the study, published in the latest issue of the Economic Journal. “But it isn’t just folklore — this is a national pattern.”

First-borns who dropped out of school were 20 percent less likely to be getting most of their annual income from their parents than younger siblings in the same situation, Hao and her team found after reviewing annual surveys, involving more than 7,000 kids each year, conducted from 1979 to 1994 by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In addition, the researchers found, first-born daughters who got pregnant as teenagers were 30 percent less likely to be getting most of their money from their parents than younger female siblings.

“Parents have an incentive to play tough with their kids, especially the older ones, to try to establish this signal to the other children that they’re not a pushover,” says Joseph Hotz, an economics professor at Duke University and a co-author of the study.

It’s all for the sake of setting an example, a refrain first-borns know all too well. By punishing the oldest kid more severely, Hotz says, parents are hoping to essentially scare the younger brothers and sisters straight, keeping them from making a similar mistake.

Parenting a perfectionist

“We did become stricter with Joshua after Justin was born,” says Ken Jones, father to the Jones boys — Joshua is 13, and Justin is 11. “I think I was a bit rougher on Joshua. He had to do things more perfectly.”

As the Jones family, who lives in Corona, Calif., has found, and the new research confirms, being a little tougher on the oldest kid in the family often turns out a kid like Joshua — the stereotypical rule-abiding, responsible first-born.

The study showed that older siblings were much less likely to drop out of school or, in the case of girls, get pregnant, than the youngest in the family, perhaps because they’ve had a lifetime of being held to higher standards.

That stricter parenting style often shapes the first-born kid into a play-by-the rules perfectionist, so parents tend to rely more on their oldest child than the younger kids, says Kevin Leman, a Tucson, Ariz., psychologist and author of “The Birth Order Book.”

“When a job needs to get done, it’s the habit of the parent to call on the first-born, because they’re the most reliable and conscientious,” Leman says. But it's no accident that the oldest has become a responsible wonder child; it's the parenting strategy that made them that way.

That’s how Ed Newman, a first-born, describes himself as a kid. As a teenager in New Jersey in the ’60s, he would never consider breaking his 11 p.m. curfew. He even remembers ignoring a group of buddies who repeatedly rapped on his window one night, trying to get him to come out. “It just seemed … wrong,” says Newman, now 55 and living in Duluth, Minn.

Flash forward 30-odd years later, and Newman’s youngest brother, eight years his junior, hits him with this piece of information: Baby brother Robert didn’t even have a curfew growing up.

“I knew my parents had loosened up some, but I didn’t know they had loosened up completely!” says Newman.

This is the same brother, Newman adds, who once singed off his eyelashes and eyebrows after making an explosive that blew up in his face.

Younger siblings, the researchers found, really are more likely to take more risks than the oldest kid in the family. In the data Hao and her team reviewed, younger siblings were especially more likely to drop out of school — and get financial support from their parents.

When it comes to parenting the first-born, there’s always a set of younger eyes watching the parents’ every move. But with the youngest, nobody younger is watching the consequences play out, making it harder for parents to stick to all that “tough love” talk. For the youngest kids who get into trouble, “parents are more likely to go in and bail them out,” says Hotz.

'Exhaustion takes over'

By the time the second and third kids come around, many parents lighten up, and realize that they probably overreacted a little with setting rules for their first kid, Leman says. “The first-born’s a guinea pig; we practice on ‘em,” he says. “Once the other kids come in, we lighten up. Or exhaustion takes over.”

With her oldest daughter, Lisa Russell set down very specific rules about sweets and TV watching, and kept her little girl, Emily, to a strict schedule. Dinner was always at 6, bedtime always at 8.

“When Emily was little, she was just always my perfect little robot who did everything I wanted her to do,” Russell says. “I thought, God, I must be really good at this.”

Fourteen years and four more kids later, dinner happens when it happens, and bedtime “isn’t so much of a time, it’s more like when a meltdown occurs,” says Russell, who lives in Yakima, Wash. Her five girls range in age from 5 months to 14 years.

“I don’t make an issue of things anymore,” Russell says. “You learn to choose your battles, and you learn what matters and what doesn't matter.”

luvmy4sons
05-05-2008, 08:42 PM
Okay...I could so relate to this article. I am a first born. I also do a lot of what they talk about with my first born. Calling on him whn I need soemthing done. He is the rule obeyer, responsible one. And the second one BLEW UP HIS HANDS...Whatever am I going to do when he is off and gone next year to California? Guess the second born will then be treated like the first born. That might be a good thing. Did you find that you agreed with the article in general Madre? :-D

cjropher
05-05-2008, 11:29 PM
I know mine are young, but I've also noticed that while everyone said that the middle child is left out, I find it's my oldest. J can do so much on his own and so he does, while I deal with D and E. So yeah, he is more independent and more of a help, but he also gets pushed to the side it seems as the youngers need so much more. Oh, and while it's cute for D to be 2, it's not so cute for J to do the same things. He's hit that age where he's not as cute anymore, he's growing up. And it's hard, because D and E are still so cute! Poor kid. I was the oldest and so was dh. It's hard work LOL

GenLovesDen4ever
05-06-2008, 08:33 AM
I am trying to think about this. I am the oldest. And I can relate to the bit about the oldest getting pregnant out of wedlock and NOT living off their parents. And some of the other things like that, but I cant remember if my parents treated me like that. Looking back I cant tell. I wonder if the dynamic changes with adoption and such. My brother and sister were both adopted.

As for my own kids. They are all so close in age that I cant tell if I treat them differently or not. If I can be accused of anything it might be that I have been softer on my son, (third child, singleton) than on my girls, twins. I can remember being stricter on my girls, expecting more from them from an early age, obedience wise. I had been concious of it from an early stage and have tried to 'remedy' hmmm. food for thought. dh says mums are always softer with boys, thier mooms boys. lol.

Timmys mom
05-06-2008, 11:02 AM
Yeah I'm the oldest and my parents were definitely stricter with my then my little sisters. The one detention I got, I was severely lectured for, and yet my youngest sister got detentions all the time, and for her it was no big deal. It is true... not that I really mind that much. My parents were the best.

His butterfly
05-06-2008, 01:30 PM
Gotta feel kind of sorry for the oldest.:???:

Godzgirl
05-06-2008, 01:59 PM
Being the oldest child i can totally relate to this. My mom however was a bit on the extreme on what she felt the oldest child responsiblities were so much that it affected our mother and daughter relationship growing up. :( Now as a mom i keep that in mind and try not to do the same to my dd.

NZMummy
05-06-2008, 06:48 PM
I am also the oldest child (as is my husband). I can also relate to the resulting characteristics in myself perfectionism, being the child who is resposible and generally does the "right" thing and independance from parents (e.g. not receiving a lot of childcare from parents). And similarly some of the same characteristics in my husband compared to his siblings. I am not sure about my children. While we endevour to treat the children equally, certainly my eldest is showing the typical oldest child traits. But I don't know how much that has to do with natural personality traits (my first-born is really easy-going while my second-born is much more willfull and relies largely on her cheeky grin). Maybe the differences also result partially from the eldest having to deal with a baby in the house for a period of his life when they just can't be treated exactly the same. Also, I believe that my parenting techniques have become more gentle - it is interesting that they say that this is a common trend because I thought it was just me :).

Madre
05-06-2008, 07:16 PM
The oldest here, too! I think it's more of an inclination to be a bit overly protective with the oldest because it's your first and you don't know what's what. (I know my parents were with me.) The oldest usually gets more time and, for sure, more photographs. :mrgreen:

GenLovesDen4ever
05-07-2008, 09:16 AM
Madre, I was thinking something like that too. I know that was the case with me and my first.