Perhaps more than anything else, a
woman having a second baby fears losing her special
connection to her firstborn. Will the beloved child
who was once your one and only get lost in the shuffle
as the family grows? Is she already getting short shrift
now that the new baby is here?
It's enough to make a mom feel so guilty
that she thinks she's got to take her older child to
Disney World. Yet who has the time or energy for special
outings after having a second child? As the family
grows, you need simple strategies to keep love alive,
not new things to add to your to do list.
The following tactics helped me stay
close to my older daughter after her sister was born.
Six years later, I still rely on some of them. The
result: my firstborn and I are tight and she's a fabulous
big sister. I'm close to my younger girl too:
*Greet your older child first. An
infant's tiny wail will always claim your attention.
And babies are so cute! Hug your older child first
when you enter a room. The baby won't know the difference,
but your firstborn will appreciate the attention.
*Get in cahoots. Early on I
developed a habit of looking at my older daughter and
rolling my eyes when little sister did something silly.
With a glance, I recognized my older girl's special
status as the more mature child. The new baby became
the source of shared amusement rather than a threat.
*Do errands together. In Beyond
One I describe preserving my relationship with
my firstborn by making her my errand girl after little
sister's birth. Doing errands with her while dad
or a sitter tended the baby gave us time alone and
allowed me to get things done. Now she's 8 and guiding
me around Target!
*Get down. Kneel. Sit on the
floor. Crouch by the bath. Do what it takes to make
direct eye contact with your older child. Enter her
world. Otherwise you're always the mom standing holding
the baby.
*Seize the moment. Is Dad diapering
the baby? Read a short book to your firstborn. Is the
little one content in the bouncy seat? Cook with your
older child. Look for opportunities to focus one-on-
one attention on your firstborn. A few shared minutes
can do wonders.
*Make the baby a joint project. It's
messy and inefficient. But having the toddler help
give the baby a bath can bring you together -- though
you won't have a hand free to photograph the event.
Ask your older child to wash the baby's feet, not her
head!
*Give time, not toys. Stuff
just sends the signal that something is wrong with
adding another child to the family. Avoid buying new "big
sister" toys for your older child -- unless you're
purchasing something to do together. Remember, money
can't buy you love.