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EQUAL TIME FOR SIBLINGS
by Ivy D. Marcus, Ph.D., C.D.E.
The fields of child psychology, behavioral pediatrics,
and pediatric endocrinology all have populations of dedicated professionals
who are devoted to the understanding and care of children with diabetes.
Children with chronic illnesses, such as diabetes, provide health
practitioners and parents with incredible challenges. These children
are usually the focus of intense attention, both medically and behaviorally.
For health-care professionals, children with diabetes present additional
concerns not typically involved in the care of adults with diabetes.
Parents of children with diabetes-in addition to their usual parenting
tasks-are called upon to monitor their children's blood sugar levels,
insulin dosages, food intake, and moods in a daily basis.
One of the effects of such intense attention on a
child with diabetes is a dramatic shift in family dynamics. Such
shifts in family systems can have a tremendous impact on the siblings
of the children with diabetes. Yet the psyche of the sibling can
easily get lost in the shuffle and chaos of caring for a chronically
ill child. To preserve good parent-child relations and good sibling
relations, however, it is extremely important for families and professionals
alike to address the issues of siblings of children with diabetes.
Sibling Relationships
In general, the significance of sibling relationships
on people's lives is ignored or, at best, downplayed. Yet relationships
with siblings can and often do have powerful and profound influences
on our lives. Experiences with siblings can produce intense positive
and negative feelings, both during early childhood years and throughout
adult lives as well. Such feelings have the potential for shaping
behaviors, thinking patterns or styles, and emotions for life.
In a sense, sibling interactions provide the first
experiences in peer relationships. They may therefore form the mold
from which future peer or intimate relationships emerge. Relations
with brothers and sisters can teach children to love and act lovingly
even when they are not feeling love in the immediate moment. They
can teach the attitudes and skills necessary for all caring and
enduring bonds between people. Sibling relations provide opportunities
to learn about conflict resolution and can show children how to
respect differences between people and even celebrate them. They
can encourage kids to truly listen to one another. These relationships
can also provide the most significant lessons they learn about sharing,
whether it be sharing parental love and attention or sharing tangible
resources, such as toys or books.
Sibling interactions can teach children to delay gratification
and to negotiate with and respect others. They may also illustrate
the benefits of having different strengths. Additionally, sibling
relationships can shape children's views on competition and rivalry,
as well as on closeness and trust versus distance and mistrust.
They certainly can teach children about friendship, and they may
help form their views on appropriate roles for individuals, both
in families and in society. Brother and sister relations can also
give children models of acceptance or rejection and thereby influence
self-image, self-approval, and self-acceptance.
Given the breadth and depth of influence that siblings
can have on our lives, it seems worth the effort to devote some
thought to sibling relationships. When one sibling has diabetes
and the other does not, even more complex issues can arise within
the sibling relationships, making examination of it even more important.
Taking On Roles
Typically, the siblings of children with any kind
of chronic condition-diabetes, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, asthma,
cancer, mental illness, or anything else-are given a secondary role
in their families. When it comes to the total amount of time allotted
to each child, the so-called "healthy, less needy" child
usually receives proportionately less time.
Because these children are not the focus of intense,
daily attention the way their siblings are, they may feel ignored
and unimportant. In response to these feelings, such children will
often take on specific roles in their families. For example, some
siblings take on the role of the "helper" or "aid."
These children typically both protect and help their sibling and
parents with the routines of medical regimes and with other household
duties. Other children become "ghosts," and basically
remain silent, never cause trouble to the parents or family unit,
and seem to live a quiet life separate from the concerns of the
sibling with the chronic illness. Another possible role is that
of the "rescuer," in which a sibling acts to always be
there to "save" the child with the chronic condition from
harm or danger.
There are also children who become "distracters"
and operate in such a way as to gain attention from their parents
and significant other through unique behaviors and needs of their
own. Such behaviors may be positive or negative in nature. For instance,
a child may excel in a sport and draw attention and time through
competitive games, while another child may develop a behavioral
problem that requires ongoing attention from parents and teachers.
Still other children take on the role of the "police
officer" and vigilantly monitor their sibling's management
of diabetes self-care regimes. Such siblings may offer genuinely
helpful and tactful bits of advice, or they may "tattle"
or "rat" on their siblings for eating an unplanned piece
of cake or for forgetting to take an insulin injection.
There are also those kids who play the role of "partner
in crime." These siblings may encourage their brother or sister
with diabetes to binge with them or to keep important information
about their diabetes care from parents or doctors.
Some siblings of children with diabetes don't take
on specific roles at all and just function as regular family members,
often reacting in a variety of ways and playing different roles
at different times.
The most significant issue to consider about role-taking
on the part of children is that it inevitably shortchanges all children
involved. When children experience themselves as existing in a specified
role, they cease to appreciate the full complexity of who they are,
what they can accomplish, and what they might enjoy trying. Although
we live in a society where roles are highly valued and provide us
with a lot of comfort, it is important to continually attempt to
encourage all children-both those with and without chronic conditions-to
explore all possibilities and potentials and to discourage the limitations
of one or two specific roles.
The consequences of role-taking are that children
become imprisoned or locked in to their roles. They are then cut
off from experiencing the freedom of limitless possibilities and
change. But life demands that we be able to take on many roles if
we are to function fully and effectively. As much as possible, therefore,
taking on roles should be discouraged, and no child should be labeled
into any role, be it a positive or negative one.
The emotional consequences of labeling or role-taking
are far-reaching. Children often feel resentful or angry at having
to play out their part of the family drama. Or they may feel guilty
or sad about deviating from their prescribed role. Some kids may
experience a sense of being unimportant, while others may feel an
unfortunate sense of relief at not having to take risks and be happy
to avoid trying out new opportunities.
It is important to stay attuned to the needs and issues
confronting all children and not to ignore or minimize the needs
of the so-called healthy child. Siblings of children with a chronic
illness need, as all children do, the encouragement to explore their
whole selves. Allowing each child in the family to be a complex,
multifaceted, changeable human being will help prevent the antagonism
that often results between siblings when role casting is adhered
to rigidly.
Challenges For Siblings
The siblings of children with diabetes face some interesting
challenges. At the time of initial diagnosis of diabetes, the family
system typically undergoes sweeping changes. Usually, the routines
of daily life are temporarily put on hold while the parents struggle
to adjust to the reality of the diagnosis and to the many new tasks
that they are required to learn and master.
The sibling of the child with diabetes, at least in
the beginning, typically gets lost in the ebb and flow of the new
adjustments. It cannot be stressed enough just how important it
is for this sibling to be included as part of the process of family
adjustment, as well as for the needs of this child to be attended
to in some way, even at this most difficult time.
As life settles into the new routines involving care of the child
with diabetes, siblings run the risk of continuing to feel ignored
or less important. Tremendous care and attention needs to be given
to this still very significant family member.
As time passes, the issues for the sibling will probably
change. There are a number of problem areas that often arise within
families, and they warrant addressing. However, the following discussion
of potential problem areas is not meant to be an exhaustive list
of the difficulties that can arise in families in which one child
has diabetes and at least one other child doesn't.
Labeling. The first problem
area is related to the previous discussion of role-taking and involves
the child with diabetes taking on the role of the "identified
patient." Such an identification renders the "patient's"
sibling as being less in need of resources and attention. Potential
consequences are cheating the sibling out of a full exploration
of self and of decreasing the amount of nurturing that every child
rightfully deserves.
Parents are best off avoiding the label of "patient"
and treating each child as a unique individual, rather than thinking
of the child with diabetes as requiring more from them. This sends
a healthy, adaptive message to each child that no one person's needs
are any more important than the others. The needs and desires may
be different, but they are equally and distinctly important.
In a family with two children, one with diabetes and
one without, for example, parents can, while attending to the medical
needs of the child with diabetes, otherwise treat both these children
in as normal and as similar a way as possible. Specifically, this
means disciplining both children in the same way for the same issues,
giving equivalent amounts of parental time and attention to each
child for his particular celebrations and difficulties, and focusing
on each child's strengths rather than his shortcomings.
Sibling Fights. When the
issue of fighting, arguing, or disagreeing between siblings arises,
most parents cringe with dismay and intervene less than is perhaps
ideal. Certainly, when the disagreement appears to be benign, and
no physical or emotional harm is threatened or inflicted, it is
best for parents to stay out of things and allow children to negotiate
their own issues. However, when the physical or emotional harm enter
into the picture, it is important for parents to intervene.
When intervening, it is important not to favor or
protect the child who has diabetes; such treatment is unfair to
both children. For example, statements such as, "Don't upset
your brother; just give him your toy. After all, he has diabetes,
and his blood sugar may go up too high if he gets very upset,"
discriminate against both children. In this scenario, neither sibling
learns to share, take turns, or otherwise negotiate the situation.
Let the kids work out the issue of sharing toys for themselves,
unless the situation begins to get too heated or volatile. For instance,
if one child says, "You can't have this toy because you're
not as good as I am; you're diseased with diabetes," it is
certainly appropriate for a parent to intervene and to put an immediate
stop to this verbal abusiveness.
Comparing Siblings. Another
problem area involves comparing children and their attributes. Comparisons
between children should always be avoided at all costs. No two children
are identical, and to compare and contrast them accomplishes nothing
more than generating self-consciousness about what is lacking in
comparison to the sibling.
Children (and adults alike) tend not to hear what
their assets are when their strengths are compared to those of a
sibling or any other person. So rather than saying, "You are
so outgoing and social, and your sister is so studious and intelligent,"
make efforts to praise each child separately and at different times.
In situations where more than one child is present, focus on describing
the behaviors you observe rather than evaluating or judging them.
Recognizing the Individual.
Staying focused on the uniqueness of each child is crucial in building
self-esteem and in fostering positive sibling relations. Many people
confuse the individualized, unique treatment of children with the
equal treatment of children. Children are not equal; they are unique
and special in their own magnificent ways. So treating each child
in unique and special ways can never lead to adverse consequences.
When parents manage to interact with the sibling of the child with
diabetes in a way that communicates that this child is uniquely
important and special, the child then comes to experience himself
as valid and special in his own right, and relationships between
parent and child and between siblings are maximized and may flourish.
It is impossible to treat each child in exactly the
same way. So why even try? Instead, try to interact with each of
your children in an individualized, personally tailored style. The
child with diabetes clearly requires specific, personalized care
and attention. The child without diabetes also requires unique,
personalized care and attention. Different, unique, special, and
important-but definitely not equal or equivalent.
Allowing Free Expression.
One last problem area to be discussed involves the expression of
feelings on the part of siblings. Often, the siblings of children
with diabetes are stifled by parents, significant others, or themselves
when it comes to expressing their feelings about having a sibling
with a chronic condition. But such expression needs to be encouraged
rather than discouraged or punished. Having a wide variety of feelings,
including some negative ones, is part of being human and is completely
normal. Families are best off giving permission to the sibling of
the child with diabetes to fully, respectfully, and tactfully communicate
their emotions.
Children need to have an environment they perceive
as "safe," nurturing, understanding, and receptive to
the full range of human emotions. So when a child tells you of his
jealousy, resentment, anger, guilt, worry, or any other feeling,
even if it pertains to the child with diabetes, welcome the openness
of this child. Try to provide a constant and consistent environment
in which all private communications about one's feelings and thoughts
are received with love and understanding.
Each One Is Special
The siblings of the children with diabetes are children
with unique needs, desires, and hopes that need to be nourished
and nurtured. Remember that all children are significant and require
time and attention. This is particularly important when one child
in a family has a chronic illness. When raising the sibling of a
child with diabetes, an awareness and devotion to the issues covered
in this article can greatly influence the course of the parent-child
and sibling relationships. Basically, when children, with or without
diabetes, are treated fairly, with love, respect, and as distinct,
important individuals, healthy relationships are much more likely
to ensue, and healthy senses of self are more likely to result.
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