
The loneliness of being an only child never really goes away, which is why I gifted my two daughters each other
If Santa somehow turned out to be real and started granting wishes to tired mums in their late 30s, my wish would probably remain the same: I'd rewrite history and add a sibling. A lovely one, preferably, but I'll take what I can get. Because honestly? Being an only child sucks.
My parents split up when I was one. It was the right call, as are most divorces, however it meant the experience of a full sibling was off the table at an early age. I spent my early years with my single mum; we were a great team and I was very comfortable with things as they were. Until I started noticing friends acquiring siblings.
What fun my friends had with their siblings! An inbuilt playmate! A co-conspirator against the enemy that is parents! Someone to blame when things got broken! Someone to confide in when things got tough! I was sold. My poor mother had to deal with my begging and pleading for a sibling, which unbeknownst to me was her wish too. Circumstances weren't on our side and, after years of trying to convince her to conjure a sibling out of thin air, I set my sights on my dad and stepmother.
I moved in with them at age 12 to attend a high school in the city. With my stepmum being younger than my dad, the chance of a baby half-sibling seemed much higher and I wasted no breath in regularly asking for one. Deep in their PhDs, however, my wish was not to be granted and my teenage years crept by without a sibling in sight.
To add to the loneliness of being an only child, I had no cousins I was close with. Either by distance, age or having little in common, it was just me and a bunch of adults. When you're a kid trying to figure out the world without other kids messing up beside you, it can feel like you're doing it all wrong. All the focus lands on you and that attention could be utterly mortifying.
Nowhere was this more excruciatingly clear than the summer I got my second-ever period during a Christmas trip to visit my grandparents in Sydney. Having not yet braved tampons, I told everyone I'd just skip swimming for the week. But with four adults and no other kids to absorb their attention, it was decided: I would learn to use a tampon.
Much to my dismay, my grandpa was sent out to buy mini tampons and, as suggested by my stepmum, a small jar of Vaseline 'to help things along'. The process was explained in painful detail by my stepmum, with well-meaning interjections from my grandmother. When I was finally sent off to the bathroom to give it a go, I was acutely aware of the four adults waiting just outside the door, eager for news of my success.
While the tampon incident of 2002 was indeed a success, that summer made me painfully aware of how different I was from families with multiple kids running around. While I'm sure there are mortifying moments in bigger families, at least there's comfort in knowing you aren't the only one experiencing toe-curling embarrassment.
At the risk of someone pulling out a tiny violin, at 38 my yearning for a sibling has only deepened. The loneliness of being an adult only child is an interesting catch-22 in a time when only-child families are surging and I find myself biting my tongue lest I make someone feel bad for not giving their child a sibling. No one should be made to feel bad for not having more kids, especially not in this economy (or this climate), but it does add a layer to the loneliness of being an only child: feeling like you can't actually talk about it (I know, I know – tiny violin).
So while I'll never experience the delight of completely unhinged sibling fights that are resolved two seconds later, or the joy of being an aunty to kids I adore that I can hand back, I have gifted my daughters each other. Twenty months into my experience of parenting siblings and I'm already relishing the 'But she spat on me first!' and the 'But I'm not even touching her' (said by a seven-year-old whose toe is a millimetre from angry screaming toddler's face). And somehow, watching them navigate this ridiculous, messy relationship is quietly healing my childhood loneliness.
Freya Bennett is a writer based on Dja Dja Wurrung Country and is the co-founder and editor of Ramona Magazine

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
2 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
'Forgotten' story of tragic Glasgow tenement collapse
I heard about it years ago, but can't find any mention of it online. It has since been rebuilt but it was a major disaster at the time. It would be great if any Times Past readers could shed some light. Stevie McGhee, Glasgow (Image: Newsquest) Glasgow store's closure sad loss to the high street Several members of my family were employed at some point or another at Lewis's department store, which featured in a recent Glasgow Times story (GT, April 29.) I remember they had a pet corner and at one point held a raffle to win a dog. They also had a library where you could borrow books. The toy department was special and I have memories of queuing on the staircase to see Santa. My mother worked for many years in the basement snack bar and always had stories to tell us about customers and staff. She was very happy there and made a lot of friends. We were sorry when Lewis's closed, as it was intertwined with our family history and was a wonderful store and gave good customer service. It is sad now to see it lying empty. Thank you for bringing Lewis's back to life with your article. Geraldine Bradley, Glasgow (Image: Newsquest) 'I still remember the joy of VE Day 80 years ago' I have very clear memories of VE Day (Glasgow Times, May 9). I was brought up in Curtis Avenue in King's Park with my mum and baby sister. My dad was in the RAF, based in the Bahamasm but he arrived home to celebrate VE Day. I knew something exciting was going to happen as boys came to the door looking for things for a bonfire. I had a rather horrible toy, a large stuffed gnome which I never played with, and my mum decided it could go to the bonfire. I remember being wakened in the middle of the night and being told to get dressed. We went up the road to where there was an open space in which there was a flat roofed air raid shelter and on top of this shelter was a band made up of local boys. People were dancing and singing and in the middle of this was a huge bonfire glowing red topped by my discarded toy dressed up as Hitler … Small as I was, just four years old, I could sense the joy and euphoria. Hazel Dickson (nee Bremner), Glasgow Every day, we receive emails and letters from readers keen to share their memories of Glasgow. If you'd like to send us your stories and photos, email or write to Ann Fotheringham, Glasgow Times, 125 Fullarton Drive, Glasgow G32 8FG.


The Independent
21 hours ago
- The Independent
Of course I'd be happy for a trans employee to fit my daughter's first bra
I remember going to get measured for my first bra in the 1990s. It was in Marks and Spencer, of course, the retailer has had a firm hold on that particular market for decades, and I absolutely cringed with embarrassment. Honestly, I nearly died. I crossed my arms over my chest and huffed self-consciously; I counted down the minutes until it was over and acted every inch the recalcitrant teenager who hated both the experience and everyone around me, including my mum. Fast forward 30 years, and when I recently took my daughter for her first bra fitting, I was peculiarly gratified to see that she acted pretty much the same way I did. Teenagers may have smartphones and TikTok and all the tech and street smarts we didn't, but some things really do never change. The one thing that has changed, on the whole, is Gen Alpha's greater understanding and empathy towards those around them. And so much the better. Half of my daughter's friends school the adults around them in the right pronouns to use for their peers. 'They/them' is second nature to most of these kids. Us dinosaur millennials and Gen X-ers, meanwhile, should stand happily corrected (and make an effort to get it right when we slip up). Which is why, when I read the story about M&S – the same M&S who boast about being 'Your M&S,' which presumably includes their own employees – reportedly apologising for 'distress' over a trans member of staff asking a teenage customer if she needed any help in its bra section, I only had one question: what on earth were they apologising for? The mother of the teenager in question, who complained to the store, said the retail assistant was 'polite', but that her daughter felt 'uncomfortable' with the experience. M&S told her: 'We deeply regret the distress your daughter felt during her visit to our store,' and that 'We understand how important this milestone is for her, and we are truly sorry that it did not go as you had hoped.' To which all I have to say is: show me a teenager who doesn't feel uncomfortable in the lingerie section of Marks & Spencer, and I'll show you a miracle. Of course, there's more going on here – a lot more. The mother apparently blamed the reason for her daughter's discomfort on the fact that the staff member seemed to be 'a biological male' – at 6ft 2in, it was 'obvious', she is reported to have said. To that claim, I will now quote my friend and colleague Kat Brown, who wrote after the Supreme Court ruled on the legal definition of a woman in April: 'This ruling also means that any woman who doesn't resemble some mythical feminine ideal also risks being challenged in loos and changing rooms' – and indeed, this has already happened to Kat, who stands at a statuesque 6ft 1in. We don't know whether the staff member who reached out to offer assistance to this 14-year-old child was trans, and it doesn't even appear that they were offering to fit bras for her. But even if she were trans, she was just doing her job, and doing it well, by all accounts. Doesn't every one of us deserve to be able to do that without discrimination or prejudice, let alone an apology from our employer related to us simply existing? Had the person offering to help my 13-year-old daughter in the M&S undies department been trans, I would have had no problem with it – and crucially, neither would she. How do I know? I asked her. My daughter's exact response (with the inevitable bit of exasperated sighing) to being helped, or even fitted, was: 'I'd hate anyone measuring me, Mummy. Why would it make any difference if they were trans?' When I explained the nuances of this particular situation, she added a cutting: 'Why is this a story?' I understand those defending personal choice. In an ideal world, nobody would feel uncomfortable – especially children. But isn't it our job, as parents (and members of society at large) to unpick this discomfort and name it for what it really is: prejudice. And to teach our children, just as we teach them to treat others equally, to be kind through our example. What would you say if you heard, for example, that a person of colour working in M&S had approached a teenage customer and politely offered assistance, only for the teenager to feel uncomfortable, the parent to be outraged and complain about their 'distress' – and the store to write an apology? In 2025, trans people are under fire like never before. The most recent data from the Home Office shows that offences motivated by hostility or prejudice against transgender people or people perceived to be transgender have risen; at the same time that trans people have effectively been banned from using public spaces, including toilets, thanks to the Supreme Court ruling on biological sex. There's only one person that M&S has let down here – and it's not a customer. It's their employee.


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Leicester farm opens burial ground in bid to diversify
A family have transformed their working farm into a burial ground in a bid to View Farm in Bottesford, Leicestershire, has been in the Goodson family since the 1950s but received planning permission in 2021 to turn one of its fields into a natural burial ground spans over 10 acres and can accommodate approximately 7,500 burial plots. Clair Goodson, who runs the farm alongside her husband James, says all farms are having to think of ways to vary their offering. She told the BBC: "When we farmed this field we knew it wasn't going to be a productive field so we preferred to do something different. "We thought a burial ground would be lovely because it is so peaceful and quiet here but it was mainly for the views, they are wonderful."The farm overlooks the Vale of Belvoir with views of Belvoir Castle on a clear day. "I think farming is really tough. You are against the weather and this is an easier way of bringing in some income from a field," Ms Goodson said."It wasn't a great field to grow crops before because we are are in heavy clay. But this sort of thing suits it."All farmers have got to diversify into something. We all have to think of ways to do that whether, that be hospitality or renting out sheds. This is just another way." The couple, who run the 330-acre farm with support from their two children Emily and George, said they were committed to caring for their environment."We set 93 trees here so when they grow we want to put bat boxes and owl boxes in.," Ms Goodson said."We have got hedgehog boxes. We have a family of nine hares now which we have never had before. It has been massive."There is so much more biodiversity now than if we just had crops."Now the family are hoping the burial ground proves a popular choice with people."No one wants to talk about death but I feel like more people are now," Ms Goodson said."I find that this is a nicer alternative than maybe the churchyard or crematorium because they know they can come and visit a nice place. "We hope it will continue to be busy, it is a fairly new venture so we still have a lot of space."It is a permanent fixture though. It will be here for our children and probably their children as well."