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Article Title:
==============

Special Needs Siblings Have Special Needs, Too! What Siblings Want You to Know

Article Description:
====================

Siblings of kids with special needs face special challenges.
Parents can nurture the important sibling relationship and
empower their children to cope well by using simple-but
effective-responses during those sibling rivalry moments.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

1685 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-12-18 11:12:00

Written By:     Lisa C. Greene
Copyright:      2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]


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Special Needs Siblings Have Special Needs, Too! What Siblings Want You to Know
Copyright (c) 2008 Lisa C. Greene
Parenting Children with Health Issues
http://www.parentingchildrenwithhealthissues.com



“Help! I will have a house full of relatives this Christmas. I
know exactly what will happen and I don’t know what to do about
it. Everyone will shower lots of attention on my daughter with
special needs and basically ignore her younger sister. It makes
me so mad! Any ideas?” - Mom of a child with developmental
disorder

“My five-year-old son had to go to the hospital and I stayed with
him. His older sister was so angry at me for leaving her that she
wouldn’t even look at me when she came to visit the hospital.
What can I do to get her over her anger?” - Mom of a child with
cystic fibrosis

Special needs kids face plenty of special challenges and so do
their siblings. According to Don Meyer of SibShops, much of the
medical world is focused on the affected child and siblings are
often forgotten. Don points out that brothers and sisters are too
important to ignore because they will be in the life of the
special needs child long after parents and other caregivers are
gone.

So how can parents nurture the sibling relationship, take care of
the affected child and manage to squeak in a little time for
parental self-care? It’s not easy, but understanding a little bit
about relationship dynamics and having a good parenting toolbox
can go a long ways.

When healthy children live with a special needs sibling, whether
that child has psychological, neurological or medical problems,
they naturally have an understandable potpourri of feelings that
swirl within depending on the situation, the family culture and
their mood at the moment. Such feelings may be love, resentment,
protectionism, feelings of helpfulness and hopelessness
interspersed at times with “just wishing my sister would die!”

Surprisingly, although children “lean” toward one feeling or
another, parents consciously or unconsciously validate certain
feelings and those are the feelings that become most habitual or
primary. In our book “Parenting Children with Health Issues,” we
note that there are various ways parents, without realizing they
do so, validate dysfunctional or unhappy feelings in the healthy
sibling. We can look at one example here:

Understandably, parents may vibrate feelings of guilt about the
time and energy they must spend on their special child. This
encourages blame in the healthy sibling. So a mother might
respond to an upset sibling with: “Paul, honey, I’m sorry, but
Nate needs a lot of my time right now.” Especially if this is
said with a tone of slight plead, the response of most healthy
siblings will be, “Well, it’s not fair! You should be spending
more time with me!” How different this is than when the parent
says, with love and understanding, “I understand that you’re
frustrated. And I appreciate your understanding about the time
Nate is taking right now. Not every kid could handle it so well.
Thanks.”

When confronted with a child’s upset feelings, there are two
common mistakes parents make: They validate the child’s upset by
responding with too much sympathy or defensiveness or they
invalidate the child’s feelings by dismissing their concerns. The
solution? As shown in the example above, respond with empathy and
acceptance of the child’s feelings while not giving approval of
“acting out” behaviors and giving the child the “you-can-cope
message.”

One of the best gifts a parent can give any child is the ability
to cope well with the challenges life throws their way. As
adults, we know that life will always have problems and
frustrations but it is how we handle them that will ultimately
determine the quality of our lives. When children have the
experience of coping well with problems, they are confident and
they take responsibility for their lives. It is too easy for
siblings of disabled kids to take the victim position: “If it
weren’t for John’s illness, my life would be easier” or “If it
weren’t for Susie’s disability, I’d be happy,” etc.

There are a number of ways that parents can help the healthy
siblings of a special needs child to cope:

1. Parents need to spend some individual time with the healthy
child. Parents may need to play tag-team to do this. Even a quick
dinner at McDonald’s can be a time of important one-on-one
connection.

2. Expect (with great appreciation) that the healthy child will
help with some of the necessary routines concerning their brother
and sister and other jobs around the house. Chores are an
important way for all kids to contribute to the family and human
beings love what they contribute to. But be sure to pay a child
for special duties above and beyond what is usually expected and
keep expectations reasonable.

3. When and if the child expresses negative or angry feelings
listen with acceptance, not necessarily approval. Everyone needs
time to vent and wants his or her feelings to be accepted but
that doesn’t mean parents have to agree with the content of the
complaint. Words that show acceptance without necessarily
agreeing with the feelings are: “Thanks for letting me know how
you feel”

“I appreciate your telling me these things.”

“I can understand that you feel that way....”

4. After listening, questions may help children move toward
resolution:



“How long do you think you’ll be upset about....?”

“What is your plan for handling.....?”

5. Special needs children may require more than average physical
contact from their parents and siblings are sure to notice. Make
sure you give the healthy child equal touch, hugs, and
eye-contact.

6. Be sure siblings are getting accurate information about the
disability or disease. Where there is a lack of information, kids
often fill in the gaps with misinformation or they might blame
themselves for causing the problem.

7. It is helpful to educate extended family members, schools
contacts and close others about the siblings’ special challenges
and needs. But be sure to talk this over with the sibling first-
especially an older child. Make a plan together ahead of time
about the best way to handle those family members who are coming
for the holidays! This will reduce stress and hard feelings.

8. Make the effort to find out what your children need as
individuals; there many good books on personality styles. By
becoming aware of your child’s personality style, you will be
more able to respond effectively to the behavioral or emotional
challenges that come up. You might think that the sibling who is
spending time all alone in his room with his books is depressed-
and that might be the case. Or it might be that your child is an
analytical introvert who simply prefers books to people! Take the
time to understand who your children really are.

So, as you navigate the ups and downs of family life with a
special needs child, keep these tips in mind:

1. Remember that the siblings of special needs kids are kids
first. Before “blaming” sibling problems or family issues on the
challenges around living with special needs, first see if there
is another reason that is unrelated to the special needs. Maybe
the sibling is acting out because he or she is having a hard time
at school or a problem with friends or a girl/boy friend. Look at
the whole child first, before assuming that it is the issue of
special needs that is causing the problem. Again, when parents
feel guilty, the situation is more easily confused.

2. Parents set the model for good problem solving, conflict
resolution and coping skills. The children will learn to cope
with hard times and the sibling’s special needs by watching and
learning from the parent. Does a parent whine and complain about
the situation? Is a parent angry and frustrated? Do the parents
fight with each other over the problems? Do they “blame” the ill
child for their financial, marital, and relational problems? If
so, you can bet the siblings will, too.

3. Parents must take good care of themselves. Not only is this
important to avoid burnout but again, it sets the model for the
children. This means that parents take the time for date nights
and self-care time. This also means that parents do not tolerate
disrespect from the children (or each other). They set healthy
boundaries around the many demands that come with raising a
disabled/ special needs child.

4. Focus on thankfulness and the positive. Foster a spirit of
helpfulness, cooperation and appreciation for each other and the
blessings that are present. Make it a practice to count your
families’ blessings together each day: jobs, a roof, food,
medical insurance, freedom, friends and family, resilience,
compassion, depth, love, faith and hope. 5. Learn effective
parenting skills. Parents must have good, effective parenting
skills to rely on. There is no substitute for knowing how to
defuse arguing, setting limits without causing power struggles
and communicating about difficult issues.

6. Don’t always make ill/disabled children the focal point of the
family. They are a part of the family, not the family. Don’t
define/ label yourselves as parents of a child with a disability.
We are all people, first, with hopes, dreams, fears, needs and
gifts. 7. Don’t overcompensate for your guilty feelings of not
being able to spend enough time with the siblings. Some parents
try to “make it all better” with material things and not setting
limits when it is appropriate to do so. This creates more
problems than you actually solve. Entitlement (aka “spoiled child
syndrome”) can become a real danger in homes with special needs
kids because it leads to kids who become hostile-dependent. This
is when people think they are entitled to something and when they
don’t get it become angry, resentful, blaming and bitter. We’ve
seen far too many relationships destroyed by these sad responses.

It is true that in the end, siblings will be there long after
parents are gone but a parent’s influence, both positive and
negative, can last generations. By purposefully nurturing
relationships and responding effectively to the challenges that
arise, parents can leave a legacy of children who grow up to be
responsible, resilient, independent, and supportive. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
>From the award-winning book “Parenting Children with Health 
Issues: Essential Tools, Tips and Tactics for Raising Kids 
with Chronic Illness, Medical Conditions and Other Special 
Needs” by Foster Cline M.D, child psychiatrist and co-founder 
of Love and Logic, and Lisa Greene, mom of two kids with cystic
fibrosis and parent coach. For free audio, articles and other 
resources, visit http://www.ParentingChildrenWithHealthIssues.com 


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