Eldest children are leaders

Eldest children are leaders
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Birth order has a great influence on child development, specifically because parents tend to raise each sibling differently – which can be both good and bad. But before you go blaming your parents, read on to see if it stands true for you, as there are mitigating factors.

Eldest children tend to be ambitious, driven leaders. “The firstborn gets a lot of focus and attention as there are no other children for distraction,” says child and family therapist Dr Meri Wallace, author of Birth Order Blues. “The child can get lots of teaching, and so can grow up to feel very self-confident and strong enough to be a leader.” This leadership role was noted by Alan Stewart, psychologist at University of Georgia, in his 2012 definitive analysis of birth order studies. Plus, parents often task firstborns with helping with younger siblings and chores, which develops their leadership role. “Mum will say, ‘I have to take a shower, go watch the baby for a while,’ so the firstborn knows how to be responsible and nurturing,” Wallace says. “The firstborn gets lots of education in being a leader.” Leadership also requires good manners. Here are some forgotten manners that parents should teach their children.

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Older children are smarter

Older children are smarter
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Much research, including a recent study from The University of Edinburgh, shows that oldest children tend to have higher IQs than subsequent children. This could be because parents provide more mental stimulation to their firstborn. “The time that parents have available to read to their first child, to explain things, is greater,” Wallace says. “Parents tend to talk to the oldest more – whether they’re home or going for a walk outside. Parents might ask ‘Why do you think the sky is blue?’ or ‘Why do you think the leaves are turning colour?’” Older children then develop more analytic and conceptual thinking skills. This could be why 21 of the first 23 NASA astronauts were firstborns. “They have larger vocabularies and learn to think like adults, which is why they are so responsible,” says Dr Linda Campbell, a psychologist at University of Georgia and a leading researcher in birth order. But the downside of this added parental attention is that firstborns feel more pressured to do well. “The oldest can become a perfectionist, and then worry that if they don’t get things perfect they’re not valuable or lovable,” Wallace says. Think you’re a smart eldest child, or think you’re smarter than your own older sibling? Try these jokes that are guaranteed to make your inner genius laugh.

Middle children are creative

Middle children are creative
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“Marsha, Marsha, Marsha!” Everyone remembers Jan Brady’s classic middle-child cry on The Brady Bunch. And it does seem that the stereotype is often true. “The parents are very busy with the older child, who is either going on their first sleepover or starting high school or going on the first date,” Wallace says. “And the younger child needs so much help, so the middle child can really get lost in the shuffle.” Because everything the middle child is doing the eldest child has done before, they may feel lost. “The middle child doesn’t have a clear identity,” Wallace says. Even so, the constant companionship of siblings could be the reason middle children are less likely to be diagnosed with emotional disorders, according to a 2013 study from Spain. And having to find their own niche can often lead the middle child to branch out into other areas and become more creative, without the parental expectations eldest children face. “The middle child finds interesting ways to get attention, so you often get a middle child who’s an artist or a jokester,” Wallace says. If you’re a middle child and think you have middle child syndrome, think again, middle children have many hidden powers.

Middle children are good negotiators

Middle children are good negotiators
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Children born in the middle often end up playing the role of peacemaker between their siblings, and as such, also do well in leadership roles. A surprising fact: 52 per cent of American presidents, including Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy, were middle kids, according to Katrin Schumann, co-author of The Secret Power of Middle Children. “It is true that middle children are squeezed, but they are great negotiators and compromisers because they have been called upon their entire lives to do so,” Dr Campbell says. Their people skills were evidenced in a study showing middles do better in group situations than oldest or youngest children. “The middle child tends to know how to get along with people and calm a situation down – they can understand things from both angles,” Wallace says. They also tend to hold fairness and justice in high esteem: Martin Luther King, Jr., and Nelson Mandela were also middle children. Their willingness to compromise also leads middles to be happier in marriage, according to an Israeli happiness study, says Schumann. Try these surprising ways to be happy, no matter what challenges you face.

Youngest children often become entrepreneurs

Youngest children often become entrepreneurs
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We think of the baby of the family as holding a special place in their parents’ hearts, and while that may be true, it’s not because their parents give them more attention. In fact, they can often end up feeling left out. “The younger one feels like, ‘Hey, how come my older brother can ride on a two-wheeler and I can only ride on a tricycle, what’s wrong with me?’” Wallace says. “Young children do not understand the differences between them and the older kids, and so the youngest child can feel very inadequate and flawed.” Plus, older siblings often don’t want the younger siblings around. “I watched an older sister who was about three or four setting up a tea set really carefully, and then along comes the toddler straight towards the tea set, and the older one is going, ‘Stop! Stop!’” Wallace says. “So the youngest often feels unwanted and neglected.” They also have less opportunity to get their parents’ attention. “The youngest can be cute because of ‘forever being the baby,’ but manipulative because family don’t take the youngest seriously,” Dr Campbell says. To an even greater extent than middle children, youngest siblings have to find a way to blaze their own trail, as evidenced by a study from the UK that showed last-borns were most likely to become entrepreneurs. Thinking big and realising a dream takes courage. Here are some tips on how to kick-start your secret ambition.

Youngest children are more relaxed

Youngest children are more relaxed
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Because parents are inexperienced with their eldest, they tend to be uptight with them, a trait that can rub off on the child. But by the time they get to their youngest, parents know what they are doing, so that child “benefits because the parents are calmer ­– they know they raised a three-year-old who they didn’t kill,” Wallace says. “The parents feel more relaxed and easy-going, and so the youngest tend to be more relaxed kids.” Plus, because the parents’ attention is divided, the youngest child tends to get away with more. “The rules for the second child are much more flexible than they were for the first child,” Wallace says. As a result of their easy-going nature, youngest children are often charming and humorous. According to a recent YouGov study, youngest children are the funniest sibling in the family, so it’s no surprise Billy Crystal, Goldie Hawn, Jim Carrey, and Steve Martin are all youngest children. “The older one got to school first so that base is covered,” Wallace says. “So it’s like, “Okay, I’m not going to be the intellect of the family, so I’m going to go do something unique to get attention!’” Learning to identify what makes us stress, and how to avoid these triggers might be something the youngest in the family learns from an early age. Check out these tips on how to learn to relax.

Only children act like both an eldest and youngest

Only children act like both an eldest and youngest
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The only child in a family gets all of their parents’ attention for life – which has its pros and cons. “You’re the firstborn and the last-born, so you have a mixture of experiences,” Wallace says. So while you might be a high achiever, you are also babied like the youngest would be. At the same time, “only children are little adults because they live in an adult world,” Dr Campbell says. But don’t feel too bad for only children – a study from the UK showed only children are happier because they don’t have to deal with sibling rivalry. Although the lack of siblings may cause them to have lower social skills in kindergarten according to research, by Year 5, they’ve caught up with their peers. And contrary to popular thinking, analysis shows onlies aren’t lonely, and the resources their parents can devote to them often lead them to be successful.

Family size affects middle kids most

Family size affects middle kids most
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The notion of the “eldest, middle, and youngest” birth order is predicated on no more than three children in a family – but what happens when there are more than that? Not surprisingly, middle children tend to be affected the most. “If you’re the middle child of many kids, now you really have problems establishing an identity, and you really have trouble getting attention, while the oldest and youngest still have the same focus,” Wallace says. But the benefits of being a middler seem to be more pronounced in big families, too – a study from the University of Ohio found that each additional sibling drops their future chances of divorce by two per cent.

Mind the gap – in siblings’ ages, that is

Mind the gap – in siblings’ ages, that is
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The closeness in age between siblings intensifies birth order traits. “Studies find that kids closer in age are more competitive,” says Wallace, because they have more similar needs from their parents. This is rooted in evolution by having to compete with siblings for survival. “If you watch little birds in a nest, they’re battling just to get the food,” Wallace says. This is why, contrary to popular thinking, twins can be fiercely competitive, she says. So is there an “ideal” age gap between siblings? “Four-year-olds tend to start finding their social life and school more important than Mummy and Daddy,” Wallace says. “The older the firstborn is, the more you can talk about the experience [of getting a new sibling] and how they are feeling.” With more than a five-year gap, some psychologists believe that birth order “resets,” so that a middle child can actually take on the traits of a firstborn. But a very large age gap, as in the case of a second or blended family, can throw even older children for a loop. No matter what size your family, or size of age gaps, disagreements can arise. Here are the do’s and don’ts of settling family feuds.

Why you may not identify with your birth order

Why you may not identify with your birth order
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“But I don’t have the typical traits of a middle child!” you say. Some may point to this as evidence that birth order really doesn’t matter – but Dr Campbell and her colleague Dr Alan Stewart have developed a theory why this may occur. “Only 60 per cent of all people actually identify with their actual chronological birth order,” Dr Campbell says. “We developed the ‘psychological birth order’ inventory 15 years ago, and it remains the only inventory that measures how a person actually feels and identifies with a place in their family.” A different psychological and chronological birth order might occur if the eldest sibling is unwilling or unable to take up the reigns as the sibling leader – then the middle might become a de facto firstborn. “If your oldest child fails miserably at school then your second child might become the brain of the family, or if the oldest child is sick then the second child can take on firstborn traits because that’s the person you turn to for help,” Wallace says.

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