Saturday, January 28, 2006

More on "One and Only"

I know two people who have one son who has an autistic spectrum disorder, and he is in each case an only child (well, I know the boys have fathers too but it is the mothers I know - so I suppose that's four people).

In one case they struggled to have children and their son is a surprise, late life child (don't know them well enough to know if fertility treatment was involved). In the other case he was just a surprise, which led to a rapid decision to move in together, and finally get married after he was born. Both are clearly loved, nay, doted on. But I'm not sure if I'd feel differently about having another child if the first had some kind of disability, or an illness that might need extra care.

If it were me, I think I would worry about a child that would need extra care, having no relatives once we reached old age. I'm sure that some selfishness - a child who needs care themselves is not going to be able to care for me - comes into it. But would it be fair to bring a second child up who knew that they would have elderly parents and a sibling in need of care? And, given that most parents have some kinds of expectations, but tend to reduce them for children who are less likely to meet them, would the other child then have all those burdens on them alone?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You know, a friend and I have discussed this very issue in great detail. Her second child, her son, has been diagnosed with PDD-NOS, and watching her family struggle with it has been sobering and educational for me. I watch her older daughter suffer greatly from losing the attention of her parents and the normalcy of day-to-day life (inasmuch as any family's life is normal), and it's really made me think that if Charlie were in need of intensive help, he would surely be an only.

Anonymous said...

Can I assume, then, that even as you want to get pregnant, you have fears about the responsibility it entails?

This is a constant concern for me. I want I want I want and yet I know that logically, having a child will make things harder too.

I choose to leap in anyway and hope I never wish I hadn't.