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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

DIL has narrow view of family size

Washington Post

Dear Carolyn: My husband and I had one child, who by all accounts has had a great life. He is married now with a child, and he and his wife – whom my husband and I both love – plan to have additional children.

My son has apparently expressed to his wife that he did not enjoy being an only child.

His wife often brings up the subject of how “hard” it would be to be an only child.

Our reasons for having one child are personal, I shouldn’t have to explain them, but I do find myself either defending our position or being offended and hurt. I don’t want to cause any kind of rift, but I want the subject closed. Help? – “Single” Mom

You do need to speak up, both to prevent that rift you fear and as a pre-emptive bit of kindness toward her. If she were walking around with toilet paper stuck to her shoe, then you wouldn’t think twice about calling it to her attention. Her blend of pity and disdain for only-child-hood is the social equivalent of ambulatory TP; she is going to make a fool of herself around someone who isn’t as charitable as you are.

In deciding how to approach her, you have two things going for you. The first is your affection for her. Fondness shows, and since you’ve taken great care to account for it in your letter, I don’t doubt you can also account for it when you have this conversation with her.

Your second advantage is her apparent inability to resist hammering this topic around you. The hardest part about a hard conversation is starting it; voila, she’s starting it for you.

Here’s the argument you made in your letter, tweaked a bit: “Please be careful how you judge family size: Just as some people have more children than they planned or hoped to, many have fewer. That can make it particularly painful to hear how ‘hard’ it is for the kids in these families. I thought you’d want to know, because I’m sure you don’t mean to hurt people.”