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As an Irish national, living the US with my husband and three children, I am a freelance writer. You can find me as a featured history/...
 
 
 
 

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Admit It: You Have a Favorite Child

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My 7-year-old read the cover of our copy of Time magazine to me: "Why Mom Liked You Best*. The Science of Favoritism (*of course she would never admit it)."

The cover features three blonde young children, a boy and two girls. Just like our family. Favorite girl has a big piece of cake with an even bigger smile on her face, while non-favored younger children have small pieces and rather grumpy faces.

Of course it was the cake in the picture that interested my kids the most. Each of them has complained at one stage or another than so-and-so gets more, or doesn't get reprimanded like they do or gets better "stuff" in general.

Magazine cover

The good thing is that each one has complained about the other, evidence that we have equally failed each child!

The Time magazine article insists that all parents really do have a favorite, even if it's subconscious. It's the natural order of things, just like in the animal kingdom.

And just like in the animal kingdom, it seems that the oldest child tends to be the favored one. Catherine Conger of the University of California, Davis concluded in her well-known study about favoritism that 65 percent of moms and 70 percent of dads do outwardly show favoritism to one child and it's usually the oldest.

Older children often grow up to be the tallest and/or strongest of the kids, with higher IQs (by about three points). It's believed that these numbers are actually low due to parents' awareness of being watched by researchers as they interact with their children during studies on favoritism.

The kid good at sports or the one who won the Spelling Bee or is a likely future Rhodes Scholar brings not only pride to the family, but the family name. It's hard not to have a special twinkle in the eye of a parent whose kid might play ball for a Big 10 university and it's certainly more fun to talk about him that Average Annie who plods along steadily with no lows - but no highs.

In animal studies, mothers prefer larger eggs, larger babies and babies born first (since they tend to be larger).  They will throw small eggs or the runt of a litter out of the nest/family home in order to focus on the healthier, older children since younger ones are considered "spares, not heirs".

Another reason researchers believe the oldest is often favored may involve the care, attention and expense invested in the first child. Parents focus on the eldest to make sure their investment pays off.

Younger siblings get the hand-me-downs and their milestones aren't as celebrated -- it's all been done before.  The oldest child's baby and toddlerhoods are well-documented with thousands of photos, videos and mementos.

The last child  is often lucky to have a few dozen baby pictures and Mom and Dad's memories of their milestones are a lot fuzzier than those of the first child. Researchers believe too much fuss on the oldest can make a first child arrogant and self-entitled. Of course, other opinions say the opposite.   Paradoxically, the youngest child may also get a little extra love and attention. Time Magazine cites a study on a bird called the coot. 

Instead of the mother focusing on the biggest or oldest, she spreads her love around and ensures the weakest and smallest get enough care so that they can grow to match the size and strength of their siblings.

This may be why the "baby of the family" in humans gets fussed over and coddled more than others.  In order to maintain their status, they learn how to charm and woo the family -- and everyone else in their world.

And what about that most stereotyped of sibling: the middle child? The one caught in the mid-section of the family tree -- the one that's sandwiched in between the golden oldest child and the overprotected smallest one.  

Middle children sometimes feel they are the forgotten ones: too average and a bit beige colored, fading into the background.  Especially if they are in a boy-boy-girl or girl-girl-boy birth order, they don't stand out much.

They are the same as (but feel a little less than) the first same-sex child and then along comes the baby -- of a new gender who adds new blood and a whole different interest to the brood based on cultural expectations of his or her particular sex. 

Research has seen these middle children become dare-devils and attention-seekers. Anything to stand out from the crowd. While the eldest

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kvshaw 5 pts

I only have one child.  Problem solved.  :-D

andreamy 5 pts

My sister and I accused our mom of favoritism - my sis was in more trouble in HS so she got more attention. I got on mom’s nerves - too much like her. But we were loved and loathed equally. Now I have two girls and I apologize to my mom all the time because now I see what we did to her through their shenanigans. Our 7yr old is the intelligent, sweet, helper, right/wrong police & wanna-be mom and the 4yr old is smart, sassy, silly & a pain in the butt, whiner. I love them more when they are funny and obedient. All that said - my hubby and I could not wish for any other lovely ladies - they are the light of our lives and we thank God daily for them. Bottom line: our favorite is the one that listens and does what we say at the moment.

Annekemm 6 pts

This is SO interesting to me! My kids are 2, 4, and 6, so still little, but people are a bit shocked when I tell them I don't love them the same. And they know it too. As a Christian, I tell them that God made them all different and I love them for who God made them to be. My oldest is my helper, organizier, book loving, quiet girl. My second daughter is my funny girl! And my son...well, he's over the top boy. They all bring joy and frustration in their own different times, but I love them all in their own special ways - and that's not the same. Thoughts???

DeliciousMinutiae 5 pts

I have two boys and one is definitely more enjoyable to be around sometimes. I don't favor him, but his older brother is just...difficult. He doesn't mean to be, but he struggles with quirky ASD traits. We homeschool, so I'm with these guys all the time. The older squeaky wheel gets more of my time and I sometimes have a hard time with that. The younger doesn't resent his brother for getting the attention, but I always imagine how great if things were more equal. They both tug at my heart in different ways, and have learned that if one cuts the brownie then the other gets to pick his piece first. We work really hard not to play favorites--they are just polar opposites so it's easy to give each of them a specialness.

Nobody wants to be Ethel 27 pts

A woman wrote into Time magazine about this cover story and said that her favorite child is the one who is causing her the least grief at that particular moment. That I agree with.

Favoritism is all perspective. I'm sure that my siblings thought I got a lot of attention because I struggled with stuff in HS. I personally thought my sister, the youngest, was the favorite. She always sat on my dad's lap at family functions, she always got new clothes when she whined for them & my mom treated her like her best friend. I felt like the drain and problem child growing up.

I hate articles like these. They cause family fights and dissent. I'm sure my son would say that we favored our daughter. And our daughter would say that our son had a lot of problems in HS and college and we spent a lot of time helping him.

Therapy - that is the answer, but don't publish this junk on the front of a national magazine. Why don't they do a cover story on motivation? or why every kid going to college thinks they should go to medical school? We are a country with high unemployment. Why don't they do a story on what degrees yield the best chance of getting a job out of college?

wannabe1987 5 pts

I actually think my middle bio sister is the "favorite."

fibro_witch 5 pts

I am the oldest in my family, I am also the shortest. I have more college education than any of my siblings, not sure how that counts as "smart" or not. I was an only child twice, once just after my birth and then again after my 2yr old sibling died in an accident. It was he, the child who never grew older who was the favorite, every thing my siblings (in the end there were 5 living children) and I did was wrong was something "HE" would have never done. He would have turned 50 (had he lived) and to this day he is clearly missed, and the favorite.

BigFatGini 9 pts

It's difficult to admit, but yes, I do have a favorite. Mine is our middle son (two of four), who is now five. He was the baby we "tried" for. The baby with the easiest birth, the easiest newborn, the only one not born via c-section. And he is smack in between a much older brother and a set of twins born five days after his first birthday. I adore all of my kids and am able to appreciate how unique each of them are and love them all of them for who they are and how they came into our lives. But it seems at times I appreciate him more because he is the one who makes life easy on me. Probably unfair and wrong, but it is what it is...

Susan Cody 5 pts

Thank you all for your insightful comments, they were so interesting to read! To the person who wondered if a disability caused favoritism (or the opposite) - studies have shown that a disabled child is often "favored" in the sense of time and money spent but interestingly, this time and money does NOT cause resentment with the siblings, whereas it would have if the child did not have special needs.

hlsblue 9 pts

My SIL and I were looking at her and my husband's baby books just last night. While her weights and mile stones are all recorded (she's the older child) my husband's are sporadic at best. My MIL said she needed to finish that, referring to the baby book. Yeah, we're thirty-two. Not looking good for finishing that book, now, is it???

Shannon LC Cate 27 pts

I was the older of two but definitely not the favorite of one of my parents. The other parent, I do feel, loved us both about the same.

I think the terminology of "favorite" is problematic here, because there are always going to be major differences in the way children are treated. The oldest is going to go first at everything and thus, perhaps in some ways seem favored. Yep, my older child's baby book is twice as fat as my younger, but that is partly because even as I was making the one for the older child, I thought "this is ridiculous, I should have scaled this way down in the planning stages!" and I made corrections the second time around!

Also, kids are different and have different needs. My two are so different that try as I might I can't choose a favorite, because what I love, love, love about one is not present in the other--and vice-versa. We demonstrate more stereotypical "pride" for our older one--she hits all those milestones first--but we are charmed and just enjoy our younger one. We can take it easy with her, having broken the ice already.

I suppose some folks do have a "favorite" as we see from the comments here, but I have to wonder how researchers decided this.

darthblonde 11 pts

Yep. Totally. But they will never know.

JewelsD 27 pts

We tease my parents about their favorite (there are 7 of us). What they don't realize is that we're serious and they really do have one. It's not me.

alligator00 8 pts

I will admit I have to fight this. I have a 2 1/2 yr old girl and a 1 1/2 year old boy. I get the girl. We can communicate, do things together, she tells me she loves me etc. The boy, he makes noise, and gets dirty, and daddy gets him. I'm still working on it. I love him dearly, don't get me wrong, and as soon as he can communicate I'm sure it will help. But I do have to make sure I'm being fair and spreading the love and attention around equally.

alligator00 8 pts

Just to clarify, when I say "love" I don't mean the inward love that I feel. I mean the outward actions that children translate into love. :-)

radar5 7 pts

It really just depends on the day.

Overall, though, if I had a favorite I would never, ever, ever admit to it.

I don't know a single good mother who would. Hmph.

HouseOfFive 6 pts

I've told each child at different times alone that they are my favorite. They beam and glow until one day they were all fighting with each other and the oldest said well mom said I'm the favorite and then this sparks the other three saying No! mom said I'm her favorite! needless to say I just grinned and walked out of the room. This solves it for us because either they think it's really true that they are the favorite or they know it's a joke and can't figure out which actually is the favorite.

ItsAllRelative 52 pts

I guess it depends on how you define favorite. I talk about my daughter more than my son. I relate to her better because she is more like me. Does that mean she's my favorite? I understand her better. I enjoy her company a great deal. She makes me laugh more. She's also older. Her sense of humor is more sophisticated. So I think to an outside observer, they may conclude she is my favorite.

My son is starting to prefer his dad at times. It makes sense to me. They are much more alike. Does that mean dad is his favorite? Not necessarily. They just gel differently. And I expect he will be closer to his dad as an adult and my daughter will be closer to me as an adult.

But I don't define my love for them as being one over the other. I love them differently and tell them as much. I let them know that I see them as individuals with unique personalities. Maybe if they were the same gender it would be more clear-cut.

We Band of Mothers 26 pts

I always liked my dad's line when one of his four children questioned him about a favorite:

"I dislike you all EQUALLY."

Fair enough.

Conversation from Twitter

qaltum
qaltum

AmanyAlshawi والله ان دراستهم حقيقية ، بس ما نقدر نتحكم بمشاعر أهلنا:(

lilmissdot
lilmissdot

blogher Yep, my mum had a favorite and it wasn't me.

Conversation from Facebook

Martha Rodriguez Guerra
Martha Rodriguez Guerra

I TREAT MY CHILDREN EQUALLY. SO THEY CAN HAVE A GOOD RELATIONSHIP.

Gael McCarte
Gael McCarte

I told each of our 3 they were my favorite too, and they are.

Carpool Goddess
Carpool Goddess

My dad told each one of us (there are 3) that we were the favorite :)

Joseph Figlio
Joseph Figlio

Of course I'm the favorite. It's so obvious that I don't even know why I'm bothering to comment.

Deborah Zwolenkiewicz
Deborah Zwolenkiewicz

Having one makes this a no brainer-she's an absolute delight and I thank God for her!!!

BlogHer
BlogHer

Child #3 (the middle, oldest child, obviously) chimes in. Three down, three to go... - Denise

Betsy VanNoy
Betsy VanNoy

I don't have any kids, but I absolutely believe parents have favorites, and I'm not it. Oh, and that whole "less-favored children not so inclined to help out aging parents?" Right on the money.

After the Pause with Minnie Pauz
After the Pause with Minnie Pauz

My favorite is the latest one who showed me I'm their favorite Mother!

Chris Tanton
Chris Tanton

I am not too worried about who is the favorite, if there even is one, i know you love us all ;)

Susan Hughes
Susan Hughes

I reserve the right to change my favorite daily!!!!!

Lana Baker
Lana Baker

Yes, I have a favorite child. Since I have only the one, though, it's OK. lol

Sarah Mchugh-Rumsey
Sarah Mchugh-Rumsey

I have 3 and each is my favorite for different things about them. One is my favorite to dance with, one is my favorite to hug, and one is my favorite to talk to,etc. It's not that the others aren't good at these things, there is just something about that particular child's personality that makes it different from the rest.

BlogHer
BlogHer

(and there's child #2, chiming in... how long before the other 4 appear...?) - Denise

Jennifer Hurst
Jennifer Hurst

No I'm the favorite!! ;)

Terri Patillo
Terri Patillo

I was my Nan & Pop's favourite. :)

Black LotusButterfly
Black LotusButterfly

Unfortunately this is true...some of it is intentional and some is just falls into the dynamic of energy between human beings. Personally, I had a child I just didnt 'understand' when they were older and it drove me crazy..and I avoided interaction..lol, but now, we are so close...I cant imagine it being any different. I think if you are honest about relationship, you clearly know this will happen in life...nothing is ever gonna be 100%

Tracey Kenard
Tracey Kenard

I have 6 brothers & 2 sisters - my mother clearly favored her boys over the girls, which was fine with me - she didn't always have her eye on me! :-)

BlogHer
BlogHer

(I expect all of my kids to wander in here and argue with my daughter Michelle Tanton about which of them is my favorite...) - Denise

Rhonda Snively Dees
Rhonda Snively Dees

Depends on the day and who's the most obedient. :)

Erin Roberts Jones
Erin Roberts Jones

I was the fave. Of course, I was an only child....who now has 4 kiddos. And no...honestly...I dont favor one more than the other. I would rather put one or two out on the deck for the day at different intervals, but I love them all equally. And LIKE them all equally.

Susan Pressley Fowler
Susan Pressley Fowler

My parents have favorites (my dad admits it, my mom doesn't), but they don't treat us much differently. If anything, my mom does extra stuff for the ones who aren't her favorites. I guess I should mention they have 5 kids & we're all adults now. I didn't notice anything about favorites until we were all adults.
My parent's 'favorites' tend to be based on how responsible the person is in life, though--

Michelle Tanusri Morgan
Michelle Tanusri Morgan

Pretending there's no favorite child is the parenting equivalent of factory production, in which every doohickie is supposed to come out just like every other doohickie.

Tiffiny Harmer Felix
Tiffiny Harmer Felix

I don't have a favorite, but I love my girls deeply for different reasons. I don't think my parents were present enough to favor one of us kids over another :/

Traci Shannon
Traci Shannon

I do not have a favorite child but that doesn't mean they're the same. Each child brings me joy, but a different joy. I heard someone say that her son was her breath and her daughter her heart. I think that is a lovely way to think of it.

Stacie Sumner McDonald
Stacie Sumner McDonald

I don't think my parents favored one of us. As a child, we all went through periods where we thought we were the favorite. At the same time. Now there's a great trick.

Michelle Tanton
Michelle Tanton

yes. i'm the favorite.

Sarah Eaton
Sarah Eaton

one of my parents did, and i was the favoured one. I HATED it.