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Best Friends
Encouraging Positive Connections Between Siblings
By Zeynep Biringen, Ph.D.
From the start, treat each of your children in a special way. With new additions to the family, continue to make your other children feel special and give them extra time and attention.
Not having a favorite (stated or unstated) among your children is an important beginning. Differential treatment of siblings or preferences can lead to negative consequences in terms of the self-esteem of your children. Often, favoritism can be unconscious, and so it takes a lot of soul-searching and open-mindedness to be aware of and then to work through the favoritism. Enjoying each of your children in different ways is not favoritism, but treating them in terms of a hierarchy in emotional closeness is!
Teach your children problem-solving skills (preferably win-win problem-solving skills so both are winners). They can then work out a lot of their own problems by using tools of reasoning, knowing that there are alternatives and, most important, that a dialogue can go a long way. Just as you talk to your children, encourage them to talk to one another.



