Supporting Siblings
Supporting Siblings
Siblings
When a Brother or Sister has a Disability or Chronic Illness
NoticeBoard includes family stories, real life accounts about what life is like for families of children with a disability. They are a timely reminder that you are not alone and share similar experiences with many other families. We also distribute the free booklets Helping You and Your Family: Self-help Strategies for Parents of Children with a Disability and Through the Maze: A Guide to Benefits and Services for Families of Children with a Disability. Most of our members are parents of children with a disability, but family and friends, students, professionals and service providers are also welcome to join and enjoy the benefits of receiving NoticeBoard.
Supporting Siblings
When a Brother or Sister has a Disability or Chronic Illness
'Supporting Siblings' When a Brother or Sister has a Disability or Chronic Illness Association for Children with a Disability, 2003 This report was produced by the Association for Children with a Disability with financial support from The Jack Brockhoff Foundation and the Besen Family Foundation, the Federal Government's Stronger Families and Communities Strategy and the Victorian Sate Government, Department of Human Services, Disability Services Division. People and organisations are free to copy and distribute this report to assist families of children with a disability as long as appropriate formal acknowledgement of the source is provided. Association for Children with a Disability 590 Orrong Road Armadale, Victoria, Australia, 3143 Phone: 03 9500 1232 Fax: 03 9500 1240 Email: mail@acd.org.au Web: www.acd.org.au ISBN 0957731833 The principal authors of this report are Miranda Smith and Mary Lloyd with editorial assistance from Fiona Gullifer. Cover picture by Prudence, member of 'The Famous 8 Pick Up Club'.
Contents
Introduction v Section 1: Sibling Experiences from Childhood to Adolescence
Sibling Experiences 2 6
Emotional Responses to Having a Sibling with a Disability or Chronic Illness Fear and Anxiety 6 8
11
Conclusion
Endnotes 41
40
44 46
Introduction
As an adult sibling with a brother who has autism and a severe intellectual disability, I have thought a lot about the ways my family and I coped as we were growing up. My parents listed the things that would have helped them cope better, which included knowing what to expect for their children without the disability. Looking back on those years, I believe that our individual ability to cope was influenced by the capacity of our broader community to support us. Australian researcher, Monica Cuskelly, advocates for longitudinal and cross sectional research into outcomes for siblings and to consider factors such as culture, family dynamics and coping strategies used within the family. 1 Such research may help service providers to identify what types of support are most effective for specific groups. Siblings of children with a disability or chronic illness may not feel able to express their concerns and needs to their parents and may lack the opportunity to give expression to their feelings, hopes and fears. The aim of this report is to outline what current research tells us about sibling experiences and thereby help parents to reflect on, and understand, their children's experience of growing up with a brother or sister with a disability or chronic illness. This report is divided into two sections:
Page v
Section 1
Sibling Experiences from Childhood to Adolescence
Sibling Experiences
I asked Youssef, my three year old, if he wondered why Sarah was different. He replied what Sarah different? So I tried to explain the differences to him, knowing full well he wouldn't understand. I explained to him about the facial features. He told me No! Sarah is like me!. Inside I smiled and knew his heart will be big enough for the two of us. I then explained to him why Sarah was in hospital Wednesday night. He said, I'm sick like Sarah. Take me doctor. I did take him and the doctor was really good at playing the game. I then asked Youssef if he understood everything I had said. He said Yes, Sarah and Catty (the cat) I love them. I know when he is ready to understand he will ask me but it will be in a couple of years. I just hope that he will still be able to say, Sarah is like me. 2
A sibling's response to growing up in a family that has a child with a disability needs to be understood in the context of their stage of development. Children respond to the events of dayto-day life based on their stage of physical, mental and emotional development. Consider a seven-year-old's self-centred view of their sibling compared to a fifteen-year-old's empathic response. Likewise, a nine-year-old's perspective, sensitivities and vulnerability will change, as she or he becomes an adolescent. Children learn from their environment and (most importantly) through their relationships with their parents and siblings. The sibling relationship, which is life long, has an important influence on the development of a person's identity. In later life, it can be a source of mutual support, depending on the quality of the early relationship. With the birth of a child with a disability, families find themselves in unfamiliar circumstances. In order to cope, families begin a process of change and adjustment. Within the literature on sibling experiences, themes of conflicting emotional responses emerge; therefore, sibling adjustment can be considered in terms of managing the influx of strong and conflicting emotions.
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There are many features of the sibling relationship that distinguish it from that of parents, grandparents, aunts or uncles: The sibling relationship, extending from childhood through to adulthood, will usually be longer than any other relationship within the family. From birth throughout the formative years, a child's self identity is shaped by their daily interaction with their sibling/s. Young siblings are prone to feeling responsible for their sibling's and their parents' well-being. They witness first hand the difficulties those closest to them are experiencing. For the sibling of a child with a disability or chronic illness, other factors that are not common to the sibling relationship come into play: A sense of responsibility for their sibling beyond that felt by their peers. Depending on the degree of their sibling's disability or illness, they may assume guardianship for their sibling when their parents die. For siblings of children with communication difficulties, the normal 'give and take' in a relationship may not exist. For example, a child who is interacting with their sibling with autism will come to understand that you don't always 'get what you give'. Ongoing family circumstances that give rise to feelings of anxiety for themselves, their sibling and other family members. Siblings may begin to experience feelings of grief and loss as they become aware of the meaning of their brother or sister's disability or chronic illness and its impact on both the child with the disability and themselves in the future.
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Forming an Identity
"When she was about two, she started to pull on me (just as Thomas does to communicate with us). At first I resisted going with her. She is normal. She does not have to communicate this way. It represented too many issues for me, but then I realised this was her normal. I followed her around for two weeks. Then slowly she realised she didn't have to communicate that way. But she needed to know I would respond to her in the same way as I did to Thomas, that she was just as important."
Younger siblings learn by watching and imitating older siblings. Developing a 'pretend' disability can be a young child's way of imitating the behaviours of their sibling, which they perceive as getting attention from their parents. "Hi! My name is Lydia and I am eight years old. I have a brother and his name is Trevor. He is special because he is retarded. And I am special too because I am cross-e eyed sometimes." 5
By middle childhood, forming an identity is partly built around defining similarities and differences between siblings. When children ask themselves how they are similar to and different from their sibling with a disability, they do so with an awareness that they may have some advantages not shared by their sibling. Carr-Gregg and Shale suggest that throughout adolescence children must complete four tasks in the process of developing their own unique identity. Adolescents begin the search for a secure and positive identity by asking questions such as: Who am I? They then seek to establish some emotional independence from their parents and other adults, sometimes by questioning their authority and knowledge. Adolescents then seek to establish a love relationship outside the family, and friendship and peer acceptance becomes of paramount importance. During middle and late adolescence, young adults start to consider career options and begin planning and setting career goals.
6
Bank and Kahn note that the quest for a secure identity is achieved by asking: Who are you to me? Why should I be with you? What do we have in common? 7 Siblings of a child with a disability can find themselves in a state of conflict when they ask these questions. For example, when schoolmates tease other children with disabilities or think it is dangerous to sit next to the child with a disability in case they catch it, what do siblings think of themselves? If they join in and tease the child with a disability to reassure themselves they are still part of the group, they may feel they are being untrue to the love and care they feel for their sibling with a disability. If they resent their sibling getting presents from relatives because they are sick, then they are not the good child mum and dad praise for helping out with the household chores. If mum and dad praise them for being so grown up, helpful and caring, then who owns the angry, jealous and resentful parts of themselves?
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"Part of my struggle in dealing with Bonnie was a need for my own identity, apart from her. When we were toddlers, Mom used to dress us alike. During my grade school years I thought of Bonnie as a witch. I felt like everything I did, Bonnie had to do also. I could not get away from her. If I took piano lessons, she had to take piano lessons. When I was in Girl Scouts, she was in Girl Scouts (Mom started a troop for retarded girls). She wanted to be like me, and yet I wonder what kind of role model I was." 8
During adolescence, a person's source of identity begins to shift, or dissolve, as they begin to question their accepted role in their family and their parents' values and attitudes. They may need more time and mental space to try out new roles in the search for their own identity. For example, if a family is not able to obtain enough respite, teenagers may find themselves having to choose between helping out with their brother or sister to assist their parents, and pursuits such as friendships and schoolwork. As they consider their future career, siblings may need help to give themselves permission to focus on their own needs. For some, the anxiety of choosing between these conflicting roles may become too much, resulting in a lowering of their expectations. Questions asked by children regarding their sibling's disability, illness, behaviour or appearance need honest and simple answers. This is important to dispel fears of catching their sibling's illness or disability and will assist in the development of their unique identity. Another important way for siblings to develop a positive self-image is through developing skills in areas of life not related to their brother, sister or parents, and which are celebrated by their parents.
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Emotional Responses
to having a sibling with a disability or chronic illness
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By the age of eight or nine, children can begin to understand other people's experiences. A child's impulse is to actively cope with a situation by wanting to do something to help their sibling but they will need assistance from their parents either through information or strategies. "I was certain everyone was looking at my brother with his obvious handicap and then wondering what was wrong with the rest of us." 9
In early adolescence children begin the process of forming their own identity. They begin asking themselves questions such as: Am I normal? Do my peers like me? Am I an OK person?
10
During this time, children become very conscious of what is considered normal. An
intense desire for acceptance results in a fear of group rejection if they appear to be different. It is not uncommon for adolescent siblings to fear rejection once their peers become aware that their family is different. "He hits me every day. He just all of a sudden hauls off and hits me all of a sudden. I don't know why. My Mom says it's part of his hyperactivity. My Mom tells me not to worry about it, that it will get better. I don't see how. The other day he sat on me and it was hard to breathe. But I know that if I fight him back it will be worse. So I try to wait it out. I worry sometimes that he might kill me. I know he wouldn't mean to, but I think it could happen." 11
For some siblings, fear of their brother or sister can be based on a real threat to their own or their parents' safety. These siblings often fear for their parents' well-being and the subsequent loss of their security. If the child with the disability is aggressive or has unpredictable behaviours, then the need for support through either talking or active coping strategies, is very important.
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Like fear, anger is an emotion infants begins to display from the age of six months. It is an emotion that can overwhelm a child and one that is universally discouraged by parents. While the preschooler may not express their anger towards their sibling with a disability or illness, they may experience anger and frustration over the lack of time and attention from their parents. The care-giving needs of the child with the disability may mean that the needs of the sibling are not met, often resulting in greater levels of frustration. Sibling anger is more likely to result indirectly from the loss of parental attention. Unequal time and attention from parents can also lead to feelings of jealousy or resentment towards their brother or sister because they still equate love with attention. Unacknowledged jealousy can lead to feelings of anger towards their sibling, as it would in any sibling relationship. A common way of coping with anger may be to express it outwardly by becoming disobedient or playing up, which may include increased aggression towards their brother or sister. In families with more than two children who are relatively close in age, a child may also turn their angry feelings towards their other siblings. "My mother never let me feel that I always had to be happy about having a disabled sister, and in fact even encouraged anger about it, as long as I kept it in perspective." 13
In some families, the expression of anger about having a sibling with a disability is strongly prohibited and only positive comments about the child are acceptable. As a consequence, siblings may interpret their feelings of anger or resentment as evidence that they are bad. Siblings who feel angry towards their brother or sister with a disability can experience intense feelings of guilt and shame. Inhibiting expressions of anger or resentment can lead to the internalisation of negative feelings causing them to avoid the source of their anger (their sibling with the disability). Validating sibling experiences and feelings can assist siblings to acknowledge the source of their anger and resentment and can help them develop insight and find constructive ways of coping.
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Many siblings try to protect their parents from their negative feelings. Some siblings feel that expressions of anger or frustration about their experiences would be unfair, given the difficulties that their parents face on a daily basis. Expressing anger may also risk the image they like to present to their parents, of being happy and self-sufficient. When the family is the main source of self-esteem and identity, the risk may be too great. "I feel bad for me because I wish I had a brother that I could really relate to. I wish I had a brother I wasn't somewhat embarrassed by. I wish I wasn't in the approachavoidance slot of being my brother's keeper." 14
Throughout early childhood and adolescence, children have a heightened awareness of what is fair and just. Young siblings may experience anger and frustration over the unequal distribution of household chores, or attention from parents. Older siblings may feel a sense of anger about the unfairness of the world, or the injustice of not having a brother or sister who they can relate to in the same way as their peers. "At a time when you want to be (a) sulking in your room, (b) screaming you don't understand, and (c) looking for someone to snog, I had instead to play the part of the model adult-c child." 15
During adolescence it becomes possible for siblings to articulate their feelings and express their thoughts and opinions. Part of their path to adulthood is to develop an independent voice. Giving adolescents the opportunity to express and explore their feelings will facilitate understanding between all family members and will reduce the risk of siblings withdrawing from their parents and their sibling with the disability.
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Jealousy
"Alex has leukemia and he used to get big packages so I used to get very jealous. Wouldn't you? But over the year I got used to everybody feeling bad for him, and giving him so much attention. In some ways, I actually got something out of it, too. All I hope is that everything will be back to normal after this year." 16
Before a child understands that their brother or sister has 'special' needs they are aware that their parents give more time and attention to their sibling. Attention from a primary care-giver is one of the main ways a preschooler develops a positive self-image. The risk is that the sibling will conclude that they are less special and less loved than the sibling with the disability.
'My sister gets all the best presents, I am always helping her but noone even thanks me.'
When other family members and friends focus on the child with the disability, a sibling's feeling of being less special may be magnified. If a sibling is going through a time of change, for example, starting at a new school or neighbourhood, they will need more time and support from their parents. If parents spend most of their time caring for the child with the disability or chronic illness, then strong feelings of jealousy can result. A child's response to unequal time and attention will be influenced by the way their parents talk about their sibling with the illness or disability. In a perfect world, another parent is able to compensate for the child's significant loss of attention from the main carer. Otherwise, a grandparent, aunt, uncle, close family friend, or even an older sibling can help the child who thinks they are missing out.
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Feelings of embarrassment, guilt and shame partly depend on how a child has come to make sense of their own role and rights, and those of their brother or sister. Whether a family can appreciate different ways of living, and the degree to which the family gives value and meaning to the life of the child with the disability will influence how a sibling manages these feelings. I can remember being embarrassed about Cathy because she is really, I guess quite upsetting to see for the first timeI can remember in a bus terminal we had to spread a blanket on the floor so Cathy could crawl and get a bit of exercise. A crowd gathered and I hated the people so much. I was just terribly embarrassed and I wanted to hide Cathy and I wanted to protect her from these people who were glaring although she certainly didn't know what was going on. 18
By middle childhood, siblings are very aware of other people's responses to their brother or sister with a disability. Differences between children at school are magnified and full of dreadful import. Young children will be experiencing feelings of embarrassment about their brother or sister's differences for the first time and will need help to understand their feelings. While children may know the right thing to do or say, the dilemma they face is meeting conflicting needs: the need to protect their sibling and the need for peer acceptance. Siblings can feel a sense of guilt or shame for not 'standing up' for their sibling or for not doing enough to help their sibling or their parents. For some siblings these feelings don't become apparent until adulthood. "I remember on the bus, no one wanted Bonnie to sit beside them. One girl walked with a limp. Every day I would ask her if Bonnie or I could sit with her and she would always turn away and tell me the seat was saved, day after day, no one sat beside her, she sat alone and we stood. One day, I got fed up. I picked her books up off the seat and threw them at her. Then I sat on her and made enough room for Bonnie beside me. It was an uncomfortable ride home, but I was tired of standing and I wanted to show people that they would not "catch mental retardation" sitting beside Bonnie." 19
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Given that their identity is not yet secure, feelings of shame and guilt can be amplified for the young adolescent. Siblings discover that community attitudes towards disability or illness are often contradictory or confused. While some differences are celebrated within our culture, we tend to consider people with disabilities as 'lesser' which is evidenced by the use of insults such as 'retard'. Some siblings cope with the social stigma attached to disability by creating a layer of pride to protect themselves from negative attitudes. By adolescence, feelings of guilt and shame are often felt when children are able to empathise with the experience of others. Guilt or shame often follows feelings of anger, embarrassment or jealousy. All children need attention, resources and special time with their parents and when a child starts to understand why their parents have limited time for them, feelings of guilt often result. These feelings can also emerge when siblings begin to understand that they have advantages that their sibling doesn't have. Having a girlfriend or boyfriend, friends to socialise with and prospects for a career can expose the stark contrast between their own life and that of their sibling. Siblings with a brother or sister with a chronic or degenerative illness may feel guilt about their own good health and opportunities in life. "I remember being so angry at her, and then feeling so guilty. She was defenceless. I lay awake at night praying that God would forgive me for having such thoughts about my sister. The range and intensity of emotions were too much for me to handle." 20
Children will actively seek ways of coping with negative feelings and experiences. While religion can bring about a sense of security and solace, parents need to be mindful of children praying for miracle cures or seeking forgiveness from God in order to deal with their feelings of resentment, jealousy and anger. Listening to children and helping them to understand they are not bad people for having angry thoughts, accepting them and supporting them will help to offset feelings of guilt and shame. It is important for parents to reassure their children that their feelings are valid, to give them strategies to cope with the reactions of others and to manage their conflicting emotions. By understanding and coping with the difficulties of family life, many siblings develop compassion and become appreciative of their own opportunities, which will in turn become the building blocks for their future emotional and psychological well-being.
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A sibling's experience of loss or sadness is closely tied to their stage of development and will depend on a child's capacity to comprehend their loss and that of their parents. For example, the response of a sibling who has a brother or sister with a degenerative or life-threatening illness will be influenced by their ability to understand what caused the illness, its future implications and their understanding of what death is. "Mom, I have an apology to tell you. When Shannon was born and you were in the hospital with her, I used to pray that God would take her and let you come home, or that God would make her all better, so that you would come to be with me. I missed you so much." 22
In early childhood, older siblings can feel a sense of loss for the parents and childhood they had before the birth of their sibling with a disability. This may include the loss of a sense of calm and security that existed before the birth of their sibling, as well as the loss of time and attention from parents. Their parents may be experiencing ongoing crisis and stress relating to hospital visits, long stays in hospital etc. As the family routines change around them, they can lose a sense of predictability and safety. For example, they may experience frequent trips to hospital or be sent to stay with relatives. Continuous upheaval can lead to feelings of fear and anxiety. Young children do not have the ability to verbalise their feelings; they express them through their behaviour. This can include attention seeking for comfort and reassurance, aggression, rapid changes in mood and sometimes regression to an earlier stage of development. These are a young child's way of coping with stress and strong emotions. Once a child can empathise, they can become aware of their parents' and perhaps their sibling's suffering. When parents explain the nature of the disability or illness and encourage children to talk and describe their feelings, they tend to cope better with the losses in their life. In many cases, siblings will continue to worry about their brother or sister with the disability. Siblings may cope by continuing to ask questions and seek assurance from parents that they are OK, and that it is not their fault. "John and I do not talk with one another, I wished we could. My friends have brothers who tell them about the high school and the teachers and what to do and what not to do." 23
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"I wish that someone could know what it's like for me to be all alone. I have to go to pumpkin patch until dinnertime instead because mommy and daddy are in the hospital. Then the baby-s sitter picks me up and we have dinner. The other kids don't understand, so I don't feel like playing with them." 24
In the teenage years, feelings of loss and grief about having a sibling with a disability can be confusing. Having grown up with their brother or sister, they have integrated their sibling's disability into their understanding of how the world is. Their grief stems from developing insight into what they and their brother or sister have lost in comparison to their peers. These feelings of grief can be disturbing when siblings are unable to share their experiences with the people they usually feel close to (friends or parents). To suppress or ignore these feelings can influence how they relate to their brother or sister, in the present and future. Parents need to be mindful of the need to assist in building positive relationships between siblings. When small achievements are celebrated, the sibling relationship will be linked to positive experiences. This can play an important role in offsetting a sibling's sense of loss and grief for the 'normal' sibling relationship. In middle childhood, feelings can fluctuate rapidly, causing confusion. They can change from admiration for their brother or sister in one instance, to resentment due to their perceived loss in another. If a sibling experiences resentment and anger during periods of palliative care because of their own loss and stress, their feelings of guilt and shame can be linked to grief. Given that siblings may face a lack of understanding from others, their sense of being different, alone and burdened can increase. In this state of heightened vulnerability they may cope by keeping their experiences and feelings to themselves. Feelings of grief about the death of a sibling is related to their stage of development and their understanding of death. If a sibling dies, a young child will only realise this over time, as they cannot immediately grasp the finality of death. They will continue to express how they feel through their behaviour.
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"There may be vague bodily complaints, confused thoughts about blame, regression, or anxieties about being abandoned. Many bereaved children turn to play or other familiar routines to regain a sense of security in their lives." 25
By late childhood, they can begin to understand more about their brother or sister's medical condition and may fear for them. They may blame others and worry about the effects of the illness on their parents or sibling. Until they can grasp the cause/s of the illness, they may fear for their own health. They may fear that if their sibling is ill or has died from an illness that it may happen to them, or to their parents. Talking with adults will be important in helping them deal with their fears and any misunderstandings they may have about their brother or sister's condition and consequent death. For example, one grief counsellor helps children in their grieving process to understand the permanence of death this way: "I take them through the fact that when somebody dies their heart stops beating. I make them put their hand against their chest so they can feel their heart is beating and that their skin is warm and that's good because the blood goes around the body. Because otherwise they do worry" 26
When a child who has required complex care over a long period of time dies, the family, which has been supported by a range of individuals and services, can rapidly lose these people from their lives. A sibling may have developed close and supportive relationships with certain service providers and have to adjust to the loss of these people's support.
27
Rebecca has taught me so many things. I've learned how to be patient, understanding and caring. How to love fully. I've learned to take time for the little things in life, like looking at the trees and watching the leaves blow (one of "Reba's" favourite things to do). To my amazement, I love the life I have because of herI would never trade it in for anything else! I learned that when in life we're faced with challenges, we should deal with them the best way we can, we should take time out for ourselves, and we should never give up!" 28
For adolescents, the process of bereavement carries great challenges due to their developmental tasks of creating a stable sense of identity, becoming autonomous, and deciding on a future career path. The grief they experience can lead to feelings of isolation (as peers may respond to them with fear) and a loss of confidence in themselves. If an adolescent already has a low self-concept, then their process of grieving can be more difficult and further lower their self-image. They can lose trust in the predictability and fairness of life causing them greater anxiety and fear than their peers. With support throughout, they can draw meaning and strength from their experience.
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While an infant may not feel lonely, they can experience a sense of anxiety. When an infant's security of attachment is disrupted, they can become more vulnerable to negative emotions. Later on, if parents become unavailable either physically or emotionally, siblings may experience feelings of abandonment. Parents often inhibit the expression of any negative feelings and this can result in a sense of isolation and feelings of shame. In the long term this may affect how they relate to other family members, their parents and their friends. As children grow older, they develop the capacity to understand other people's experiences, that is, 'to stand in someone else's shoes'. When they look at their family circumstances and the additional care required of their sibling, they begin to understand why their parents need to spend more time with their sibling who isn't as 'healthy' or 'able' as themselves. An awareness of how their parents have struggled, coupled with the desire to adopt a role of competence and responsibility, can result in siblings not wanting to share their troubles with their parents. Yet they can still experience anxiety, loss, and strong and confusing emotions. "The best thing I ever did was to go to the siblings support group. It was so cool, and best of all I learned that I wasn't crazythat other kids felt the same ways I did. I made a friend there, so now when I feel lonely or sad, I just call him up, or he calls me." 30
Just as parents benefit greatly from sharing their experiences with other parents in a similar situation, so too do siblings. However, siblings often fear that they will be judged harshly for expressing the negative emotions or thoughts they may have towards their brother or sister or their parents. "It was eerie actually. The doctor looked right through me as if I was a plant or something. He just talked to my mom. There I was, scared out of my wits, my sister asleep in a bed with a high fever, and all those tubes and equipmentI felt angry and confused and pretty lonely too. She's my best friend." 31
When siblings lack the opportunity to talk with friends or peers and feel unable to voice their feelings or problems to family members, they may feel alienated from those they are closest to. These feelings of loneliness and invisibility can be compounded when service providers do not acknowledge their involvement.
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Emotional Intelligence
"Whenever Mommy and Daddy argue, we go downstairs and play real quiet. Then she can't go bother them and get 'em more mad." 32
Up to six or seven years of age, a child's response to the world is self-centred. For example, Lobato notes that before this age, children evaluate their brother or sister in terms of how they gratify them, or not. By age seven or eight, children begin to describe their sibling's positive traits. They are aware of, and express, their enjoyment of their sibling's company. They are also aware of, and can try to influence, how other family members are feeling. For example, if a child senses a parent's disappointment, grief or loss, they may try to make up for it by being really helpful, or doing well in sports or school work. What they do will depend on what is valued by the family and the encouragement they receive from family members. Given that it may not be possible for parents to give equal attention to their children, siblings gain praise and validation by being helpful and compliant. Siblings may also compensate for their family difficulties by putting aside their own needs whenever they sense it will be difficult for their parents to meet them. By middle childhood, siblings may be contributing significantly to the sibling relationship by helping their parents or being a good brother or sister. When siblings put aside their own needs, feelings of loss may occur. From early to late adolescence, compensation for their parents' hardships, disappointments or losses may continue to influence sibling motivations and actions. Trying to compensate may not necessarily pose a risk to sibling well-being, as it may drive them to develop skills and abilities that enrich their life and those around them. However, if the need to compensate for their family's hardships is constant, it may pose a risk to a sibling's self-esteem and identity. For example, if a sibling fails at school they may feel they are letting their parents down, or worse, feel guilty for not using their abilities to the fullest.
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