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Article Title: Birth Order Dictates Caregiving Qualities
Author: Pamela Dombrowski-Wilson
Category: 
Word Count: 804
Keywords: caregiving, birth order, marriage, family, children, personality
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.articlemarketer.com
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Did you ever consider that birth order can indicate the quality of caregiver we 
will become for a loved one?  That birth order also indicates the role we play 
in our marital relationships?  By learning more about the characteristics of 
birth we can improve our relationships within our immediate families and within 
the families we acquire through marriage.

1) Where do you fall?  Are you charming, manipulative, do you blame others for 
things that go wrong in your life?  Do you like attention, are you a people 
person or a salesperson?

2) Do you avoid conflict?  Do you like situations where everyone just gets 
along?  Are you a loyal person with many friends?

3) Are you serious, scholarly, a list maker, well-organized and somewhat of a 
perfectionist?  Are you often critical of others?

If you identified with number one you are most likely the youngest child, 
number two a middle child and number three a first born.  This ranking, 
however, is complicated by spacing.  Which means the space between children.  
There is a "second family syndrome" characterized by a child born five or more 
years later than the last child.  In this case this second family child can 
have characteristics of a first born and some characteristics of a middle child 
and a the youngest. 

Look at your children today.  Can you more easily identify their 
characteristics and determine which might be the most appropriate caregiver 
when you become an older parent.  Can you look at yourself and your marital 
relationship and better understand who may be the leader and the follower.  
Which spouse pays the bills and organizes the household and which spouse goes 
along with everything?  These are extremely important distinctions especially 
as we age, as our health fails and as we need to depend on loves ones to care 
for us. 

In families with multiple children, different experiences and frames of 
reference, children will often argue about the care of their parents saying 
things like "mom or dad would have wanted this or mom or dad would not have 
wanted this".  It is often the strongest child, likely the first born, who wins 
out unless the other children band together in dissent.

In marriages where there is a strong partner, when this partner becomes ill and 
needs care, the other partner has difficulty functioning because they've rarely 
written checks, managed money or paid bills.  This situation happens all too 
frequently and the strong partner, usually wanting control of everything, never 
considers teaching the following spouse how to manage in the event of an 
emergency.  Or in other cases, the following spouse shows absolutely no 
interest in paperwork, figures and organization.  Can you guess why?  The 
following spouse is likely a middle child or the youngest.  The strong spouse 
is likely a first born or falls within the second family syndrome.

We also complicate our family situations by leaving home, making new friends, 
going to college and marrying.  If getting along with brothers, sisters and 
other family members wasn't difficult enough, let's bring other characteristics 
and family values into the mix.  It's no wonder caregiving situations become 
stressful.

If we can take a step back from our daily, rushed routines to consider birth 
order and the associated characteristics we may be able to ease into 
discussions of caregiving conversations without baited breath or seeking 
arguments.  It's usually one child that takes the lead in this situation.  If 
you're not the first born, see if the first born wants the responsibility.  
Otherwise this generally falls to the youngest child.  Other determinants are 
proximity to loved ones, marriage, and the presence of children.  Family 
members with the greatest degree of responsibility often do not have time to be 
the caregiver for a parent or loved one.  Thus the caregiving role may revert 
to the youngest who has not married and appears to have the least amount of 
responsibility.

In marriages, especially older marriages, there is an until death do us part 
agreement.   The spouses hold on tightly and care for each other even in the 
most dire situations.  While today, divorce is becoming more common when one 
spouse becomes seriously ill and requires a great deal of care or becomes a 
financial burden.  

Wonder who will care for you in the future?  Take a look at birth order and the 
corresponding characteristics, this just may give you a hint.  Also know that 
family members are not always the best caregivers.  You can protect yourself by 
purchasing long term care insurance so that you can remain independent and 
receive the care you need.  It's a better alternative than relying on family or 
ruining a family relationship.

Pamela D. Wilson, The Care Navigator, supports adult children and others caring 
for loved ones. She also hosts a weekly talk show on 630 KHOW Denver focusing 
on caregiving. Contact her at http://www.thecarenavigator.com where you can 
also access free information.
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