Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Sibling Stereotypes | Ear Biscuits Ep.286
Episode Date: May 3, 2021Are you the only child who always gets your way? Or maybe you’re the forgotten middle child? Listen to R&L discuss some of the most common sibling stereotypes as they relate it to their own experien...ces both as they grew up and as parents in this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast,
where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the Round Table of Dim Lighting,
we are talking about sibling dynamics
and personality tropes,
specifically the whole birth order thing.
We actually put a prompt out to you saying exactly that.
Let's talk sibling dynamics and personality tropes
on Ear Biscuits.
Tell us how being the oldest, youngest, middle,
or only child influence who you are.
Feel free to dish dirt on your parents and siblings too.
Yeah.
So we're gonna group this conversation
by the type of sibling that they said they were.
And you know, we'll get in where we fit in,
but I think we should probably just go ahead
and establish what we are.
Yeah, well, between the two of us,
we represent two different things
and between our families, we represent all the categories.
Everything.
I'm a younger child.
You're-
Younger sibling of two.
You have one other older brother.
One older brother.
Cole.
His name is Cole.
Not spelled like the rock.
It's not a rock.
It was originally, but then he changed it
out of embarrassment.
Just kidding, it's a family name, C-O-L-E.
Age difference is?
Age difference is about three years,
but school was?
He was a senior in high school
when you were a freshman.
Would you call that three years?
I would call that three years.
Three years, yeah.
For both being in high school together.
And so about two and a half years in age
and about three years in school.
Yeah.
I'm an only child.
Yeah.
Surprise, surprise.
The one and the only, the special, you know,
if it ain't broke, don't have more kids.
I'm like just pristine and a perfect little baby.
Just like an only child would say.
Yeah, I know, of course, I'm totally joking.
I've got, maybe there's some bitterness
that I'm gonna uncover once we get
to discussing my experience.
I did have half siblings for a while.
Well, I had a half, not a half sister,
I had a step sister in the house for grade school
and she was in high school.
And then by the time I was in third grade-ish,
mom got a divorce and it was just me and mom.
She was not, she had, I mean,
she might've had prospects to make more babies.
We haven't discussed this.
Prospect.
But I mean.
I remember a few.
She had some boyfriends.
I remember a few boyfriends.
The Brown, you remember the Brownie Points boyfriends?
Brownie Points.
We always talk about Brownie Points guy.
He stuck out the most.
She was dating him.
Walt?
Yeah, his name was Walt.
I don't know how I remember that.
By that time, I must've been 16
because I would come home.
You were younger than that when they started dating.
I do remember being 16 and driving home
and mom wasn't home
because her car wasn't under the carport,
but his car was there and he was sitting-
Sitting on the stoop.
On the stoop.
I'm pretty sure he was drinking a beer.
He had a six pack.
Yeah.
I remember this story.
I wasn't there.
I just remember my mom telling me, she was like,
now, Link got home and Walt was sitting on the stoop
drinking beer.
He had a whole six pack.
That's, I just remember-
I mean, that's just the start of a nice-
And I was like, whoa.
Of a nice Netflix and chill.
Right, well, no, but in our world, it was like,
he may be dangerous.
You know what I'm saying?
That's how I thought about it.
And I was like, it was weird for me.
It wasn't like my mom wanted to make sure
that I was okay with her dating somebody.
Walt was a fine guy.
You know, there was nothing wrong with the guy.
He was, I mean, I seem to remember him a bit of a tool.
Like, I mean, yes, there was a time
when he dropped us off at the party and on the way there,
my mom was in the car too, but it was me and you
being dropped off at like a,
probably what was like an eighth grade
or ninth grade make out party.
Yeah, the best.
And he started talking about brownie points.
Still didn't really understand what it was.
But I'm pretty sure I got some that night.
You got some brownie points?
I racked up on brownie points.
She also dated,
this is just in certain edition who my mom dated.
This has nothing to do with what we're gonna talk about.
Happily remarried.
Can you just table that conversation?
Let's table that.
Because you've got three children.
But I'm basically an only child
and then I got three children.
So you've got older, middle, and younger,
and I've got two boys.
That's why we had three.
Older and younger.
Just to see what it was like.
I knew about the middle child tropes
and so we didn't have a middle child on purpose.
No, I think you forgot to have a middle child.
And our kids are-
That's what happens with middle children.
Five years?
Forgotten.
So five years apart,
your kids are like two years apart each, right?
No, two and then-
Lando's a little bit more.
Lando's 11, Lily's 18, Lincoln's 16.
Whoa, so you got like two and then five.
Yeah.
Okay.
Anyway, so before we get into some of the responses,
we did a little boopity boop research.
I do wanna just, just up top here,
a lot of the responses that we're going to give
are going to fall into what you may already have
in your mind as a trope or as what you think
is established science about some of these stereotypes
of middle child, the different sibling order.
But just to kind of get all that out of the way
without getting into it,
if you take all the studies and try to condense them down
to just some sort of predictable guidelines
or understanding of sibling order.
You guessed it, it's indeterminate.
It's inconclusive.
There are lots of conflicting data.
And I'm not saying that it doesn't exist
and I'm not saying that sibling order
doesn't have an impact on who you are,
but most of the studies seem to indicate
that once you become an adult, these things,
other things about your personality kind of went out
and it isn't what order you were born in
that determines who you're gonna be
for the rest of your life.
I don't know if that's comforting or upsetting to you
based on how you've thought about your life.
Of course, once you get into the specific dynamics
of the specific people that you grew up with,
that has a tremendous impact on who you are as a person,
but just to boil it down to birth order is, you know,
it oversimplifies things and science is not gonna pin you
down.
I actually, I'm resistant to this,
even though this is what the science shows or doesn't show.
Yeah, I know.
I'm resistant to it, even though this is what the science shows or doesn't show. Yeah, I know. I'm resistant to it because I've always thought
about my children and well, really not as much my kids.
I think my kids kind of go against this in some ways,
but me and my brother, I think hit some of those tropes.
And I've always thought that me compared to you
hit some of the tropes of grew up with siblings,
grew up with an only child. Yeah. I've always attributed some of the things about you and some of the tropes of grew up with siblings, grew up with an only child.
Yeah.
I've always attributed some of the things about you
and some of the things about me and our differences to that.
And maybe I just been wrong all along.
Let's start with oldest and work our way down that way.
You know, we're saving the best for last.
And I'm talking about me, the only child.
Exactly.
Starting with Jada, that's Jada Leifrost,
O isn't being the oldest horrible.
The trial kid, they test it all out on us,
then the younger ones have it easier.
This might be the most universal trope.
I think the next one we'll read
is it vies for that position, but yeah.
I mean, certainly when Lily came along,
you know, you got this first child,
you wanna do everything right.
And especially, you know, there's people here having babies.
Here on earth?
Kevin at Mythical.
Kevin's wife just had a baby.
Yeah.
They're doing great.
And they're at such a, you know, I was just reflecting,
they're at such a different point in their lives
than we were when we started having-
Full of hope.
But they're older, you know?
Right.
Kevin's older, he's wiser.
He can, you know, I anticipate he's not gonna wig out in the way that I did
when I would like, I just, I still felt
kind of like a newlywed.
Well, because just a few years of marriage.
Just a few years before you were a teenager.
23 years old, yeah.
You were a few years removed from teenagehood.
So definitely with us as young, young parents
of a first and eventually oldest child
is that you wanna get everything right.
There was all these rules and systems in place
in the Neal house for Lily.
And I think that we were trying a lot out on her
that then, yeah, it absolutely,
everything that we experienced with Lily
impacted what we pivoted to with Lincoln or with Lando.
I mean, you know, it's, I'm trying to think of an example
that doesn't have to do with like punishing the kids,
but like you go from, I mean, is it,
I brought up spanking on Good Mythical Morning.
It's like, I guess that's really controversial.
Like-
I guess.
It is today, it is, yes.
And Lando was never spanked.
Lily was not spanked a lot,
but it was something that was taught
and that was part of a system.
And there were certain ways that you could go about it
that were not abusive,
I think was what was going on in our minds.
I'm not saying that spanking across the board is abusive.
I'm still not gonna say that.
Because my experience with her was that it was,
I felt like we were doing the right thing.
We changed our minds over the next two kids.
Well, by the time we got to Lando,
really we changed our minds.
But Lily didn't need a lot of spanking anyway.
So it wasn't like we really wrestled with it.
We just kind of moved on and it wasn't,
we moved to timeouts pretty quickly, even with Lily.
I will say that.
But with timeout, timeouts didn't work with Lincoln.
And then with Lando, they did.
Culturally, where we, not just in North Carolina,
but again, where we, the culture that we were a part of
in North Carolina, it was, you know,
spare the rod, spoil the child, right?
And so basically everyone was, again, we're talking,
spanking on the bottom.
We're limiting it to that.
But then there was this sort of-
An emotion, like not-
Not out of anger.
Not out of anger.
Right.
Basically, honestly, the way that I was brought up, right?
Like my brother and I were both spanked.
It was, again, my wife is the one who's done the research
and the reading on all this stuff.
And our wives are the one that do all of the reading
about parenting and most of the parenting.
Let's just be honest.
Yeah.
But, and Jessie has strong feelings about this,
basically saying that she feels,
she's completely sort of flipped her perspective
on the role of spanking.
Now, I, but just to say that I think that
there's definitely a spectrum
of how it can be administered, right?
We're not here to defend it and we're not here,
why don't you-
Here we are, I'm sorry, I got you into this.
You brought it up again and it's like,
it's such a controversial thing
that I just don't even want to talk about it.
But it's a good illustration of like,
if you got your first child and she gets spanked
and then your third child never gets spanked.
I mean, it is a good example of like how things change
and you learn and I'm sorry, but if you're the first child
in one way or another or in every way,
you inform what happens with every other child
moving forward. And I mean, I inform what happens with every other child moving forward.
And I mean, I guess what I can say is that-
That seems like it sucks to me.
The same thing was true in our household
and Locke was the one who was, you know,
we were undergoing sort of our own personal evolution.
Our worldview was being turned completely upside down
as our kids grew up, which is a whole different thing.
That studies will be done about our kids in this generation
because there's so many people whose worldviews
are changing right now.
But setting that aside, if you just isolate that,
the way that we punished Locke,
both the frequency, the intensity was definitely,
we were more lenient with Shepherd,
but it wasn't just because he was a younger child,
it was because we were changing the way
that we were thinking about parenting.
And I could say that thus far-
And I was saying in discipline specifically.
There doesn't seem to be a notable difference
between the two of them in that particular,
it's more determined by their disposition
and their personality and less the way
that we are interacting with them.
That's another thing that I think has shifted for me
over time and I do think that the science shows this
is that one of the sort of the ideas from the culture
that we came from is that the parents have
just the weight of responsibility, like your kids,
I mean, literally just Bible verses that talk about
if you train a child up in the way that they should go,
you know, they will not depart from it
when they become an adult.
And so there's actually a lot of shame
in a lot of, you know, sort of religious circles
when your kid sort of departs from that,
or your kid ends up being a hellion when they grow up,
because that means that you did something wrong.
And I think that I'm kind of coming to the conclusion
that like, yes, parenting is very important,
but a lot of it is kind of based on what you model,
not what you say, and also a lot based on their disposition.
So that's a little bit of an aside.
And we were very focused on,
even at the beginning,
based on the books that we were reading,
like I remember there was a book called
"'Shepherding a Child's Heart,"
which I thought was very helpful.
I don't remember the specifics of it now,
so I'm not recommending it now.
It was so long ago,
17, 16 years ago.
But being focused on not just getting a kid
to robotically respond and do what we want the kid to do,
but understand our children's hearts
and who they are and how to shepherd their heart
into blossoming
as a loving individual and like a well-developed.
And probably, yeah, at certain times it boils down
to just well-mannered kid.
But this wasn't true.
I can't think of another trial,
some other things that I changed. This wasn't true for I gotta say. I can't think of another trial, some other things that I changed.
This wasn't true for me as a child though.
It's almost like, I mean, my dad was so consistent.
He was so consistent and my mom,
both of them were so consistent in what they thought
and how they parented from the beginning until we left.
And I never perceived a noticeable change
between the way that I was treated
and the way that my brother was treated.
Now-
So you don't think Cole would say he was the trial
and then they adjusted for you?
That may have been happening,
but I never sensed it, right?
And looking back, I don't have any tangible examples of that
but for my kids, it's more of a 100% yes,
the leniency that we operate with towards Shepard
is definitely higher than what we did with Locke
and it's based less on, I mean, I think it's a combination
of just like you're a little,
you only have so much attention,
oh, and now there's two of them like, you only have so much attention, other than now there's two of them.
I can only devote so much attention to them,
but also it's just, this didn't seem to work that well.
He didn't listen to all, he didn't listen,
he didn't do all this stuff that we asked him to do.
So why don't we just let the second one
just be a little bit more free.
TakingCareOfMama tweeted back at us as an oldest child.
That stereotype of the firstborn being more cautious
and law abiding, totally true in my experience.
I would even go so far as to say
that I did a terrible job of breaking in my parents
before my sister got old enough to break the rules.
Yeah, like I said, we had lots of rules
and parameters for Lily.
And I think that you grow up in that world
and you're like, okay, this is, she responded to it.
So she became the reliable rule follower
that then kind of became, as Lincoln and then Lando entered the scene,
she was, sometimes we treat her like a third adult.
A lot of first oldest children responded and said that like,
they're the third parent, like the babysitter all the time,
being given substantial responsibility
to take care of the siblings and to follow those rules
and to be reliable and counted on is something that-
Well, and the negative aspect of that-
Practically, it plays out that way.
But the negative aspect of that is bossiness, right?
Like I seem to remember Lily going through
like the bossy older sister phase,
which she definitely seems like she's well out of that
at this point.
Yeah, everything that we said to her,
then she was like, oh, here's a younger kid in the house.
Now I can say it to Lincoln.
And can you fault her?
It's like, she's reinforcing the things
that we would have said to Lincoln too.
We've had to say, I can't tell you how many times
we've had to say, this is not quite as common as it was,
maybe even a year ago, but for several years,
Jessie would have to say,
"'Locke, I'm parenting right now."
You know, like, because Shepard would be getting in trouble
for something, she would be saying something, I would be getting in trouble for something.
She would be saying something, I would be saying something.
And then Locke was like, yeah, and,
and he's like, he gets in on it, right?
So no, no, no, that's not your role.
Your role is not to parent.
But specifically we're talking about
with this whole rule follower thing.
Again, I think this is where it comes down
to your specific personality.
And we're going to, like we keep promising it,
we're going to do the Enneagram episode, right?
Yes.
So kids are different and recognizing like the fact that
Locke, as I've said before, is more of a challenger.
So when he sees a rule, he questions the rule.
It's not just like the rule exists, you follow it.
The rule exists, his immediate response is,
why does that rule exist?
Is that rule actually good?
Does that rule intend what it says
that it's intending to prevent, right?
Whereas Shepard is more just like,
I wouldn't say he's a rule follower,
but I wouldn't say that he's a rule breaker either.
I would say that he's kind of just his own person.
And if the rules suit him, he'll follow them.
And if they don't, he won't.
But again, so this doesn't seem to be true with my kids.
I wouldn't say this one's a rule follower, this one's not.
And maybe it's a little bit,
I mean, how would you perceive me and my brother growing up?
You might perceive this a little bit.
I mean, the consistency of discipline
that you talked about does resonate.
Like, I mean, yeah, we would get into trouble
and you would get a punishment
and then they would call my mom and then tell her.
And then if I was involved to the same degree,
I would just get the same punishment.
But if they didn't have the conversation,
I wouldn't get any punishment at all.
But so I knew that like you were getting this,
there were always repercussions for you.
So, and yeah, so some, There were always repercussions for you.
So, and yeah, so we would break the rules together,
but I would, you know, we'd have to reach some momentum and you would have to overcome a lot.
But versus me and my brother.
But you weren't rebellious.
So if you were like, oh, Cole's a-
So I think you're the same.
I mean, I think his personality
is probably more of a rule follower, but I think because of the discipline
in your home, your actions were similar.
Yeah, I think we're kind of the same in this regard.
I think that compared-
But it's more about them, the parents,
than it is about your personalities.
Yeah, I would say compared with the general population,
as kids,
both of us were what you would call a rule follower.
Now we may have been mischievous, right?
Yeah.
Let's do some prank calls or whatever.
Let's listen to, in my brother's case,
it's like I'm gonna get the most explicit
gangster rap cassettes available
and then let my brother and his best friend listen to them.
Yeah.
But still, am I going to do the things
that the adults in my life expect at least externally?
Yes.
Am I gonna be known as a rebel kid?
No.
And that was the same for both of us.
So this trope didn't really hold true.
Let's move on to the middle child before we forget.
Okay. I was tempted to the middle child before we forget. Okay.
I was tempted to skip middle children entirely
and then at the very end,
realize it as a joke and then just end the episode.
But let's not do that.
Let's talk about middle children.
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All right, so let's move to youngest child.
You get it?
See, I still did it.
All right, middle child.
Cyrus Cole responded,
I'm number six of nine kids.
That still happens?
Parents still have like nine kids these days?
It could be a farm.
It must be a farm.
But no, but now there's with factory farming,
the families don't.
So this is not a farm.
What is it?
I don't know.
I don't know, parents want our audience?
I mean, when Christy and I first got married
and we were friends with families that had a lot of kids
and we just thought that we'd go visit them
or Christy would babysit the kids sometimes
and it would just seem so exciting.
I mean, we thought we were gonna have like six kids.
That was crazy. That was crazy.
That was crazy talk.
Well, you wised up.
Yeah. It only took three
for you to wise up.
Yeah, it really took, I mean-
It took two for me.
Well, after the second one,
I mean, we had quite a negotiation
before making the third happen.
Because I got to name him Lando, he exists.
I had to reiterate that story to him the other day.
I don't know why he didn't know that.
I was like, you know.
You wouldn't be here if your name wasn't Lando.
Never complain about it.
Your mom agreed to letting me name the third child
if it was a boy and then we went for it when she said,
okay, I will agree to Lando as a name.
He likes his name though.
Cyrus says, I'm number six of nine kids.
Being in the middle left the impression on me
of being easily forgotten a lot.
I think that might just be
because you're one of nine children.
I mean, of course they're gonna forget.
This is a trope though.
Left at stores, church, et cetera,
and my favorite, not getting picked up
from soccer practice multiple times, no cell phone.
It was quite traumatizing as a kid and took years to heal.
Dang, Cyrus.
Thanks for sharing.
I'm sorry that you were traumatized
by being left alone at soccer practice multiple times.
Yeah, you got the, but in general, this is the thing.
Middle child just gets lost in the mix.
Not necessarily literally.
Lincoln, the middle child in our home is,
he's quiet.
He's not gonna be the first to like come into a room
and just take over the conversation.
Whereas both Lily and Lando will do that.
I'm here and I'm assuming nothing was happening
until I showed up.
But Lincoln, you realize he's been there on the couch
for like a while.
He kinda slips in and slips out.
I mean, especially over this past year,
there's a lot of slipping into his room
and into his world of video games
and connecting with his friends
via his headset and screen, right?
But I've noticed that he does this thing where,
well, I'm actually getting to the next one,
so I'll wait on that, but I'm trying to,
have we left him anywhere?
Not physically.
I mean, I think that, again, I can't speak to this
because this doesn't exist in my family,
either the one I came from or the one that I currently have.
But I am interested in if you think that this,
Teresa's comment, yellow sun 11,
I'm number four of five kids
and I'm definitely a people pleaser
and try to keep the peace.
My default is to suppress my feelings and desires
as unimportant and instead defer to my siblings
and others' wishes, especially noticeable and annoying
when trying to decide what's for dinner.
Well, with Lincoln, the one exception is what's for dinner.
That is the one thing that he's gonna be the first
to suggest, hey, what are we gonna have for dinner?
I got an idea.
We need to get hot chicken from this place.
We need to get this type of chicken from this place
or hot chicken from this other place.
It's like he's obsessed with that.
But do you feel like he's ever been a peacekeeper
between Lily and Lando?
He is, he doesn't settle arguments between the two of them,
but what he does is he doesn't ruffle feathers.
He knows how to work within me and Christy's demands.
Like if we're like, clean your room or hey,
his job is to take out the trash
and to move the trash cans back.
And if I tell him to do it, he's learned,
whenever I have a plan or even if it's something like,
hey, you know what?
This afternoon, I think we're gonna play a board game
as a family.
He's learned that the best thing to do is just to say yes.
Like if I have one of these type of ideas, even though it may not be what he wants to do is just to say yes. Like if I have one of these type of ideas,
even though it may not be what he wants to do,
he knows that like, I'm so excited about it
and that the right answer,
he knows what the right answer is and he will say it.
But then behind the scenes and practically,
he can kind of finesse it
to get some extra screen time
out of it or, you know, it's like, I'm like,
hey, we're gonna play, he's in there on his screen.
I go in there and I'm like,
hey, we're gonna play a board game in like an hour.
And he's like, okay.
I'm like, it's just so refreshing.
Cause the other two, they're like,
there's always a negotiation.
Well, I got this plan or I'm this and I'm that.
I'm sure he has things that he would rather be doing
and wants to do, but he knows the right answer,
like it makes it a lot easier to then move forward.
And then by the way, an hour from now,
they're probably gonna be wrapped up in something else
and it'll end up being two hours, three hours.
We may not play at all and I'll just be in here.
You know, you can come get me if you wanna do it.
But he has this like zoomed out perspective
that like the conflict and the drama is just not for him.
You know, and so that's sometimes what will be like
having a dramatic moment as a family
and you look up and he'll be gone.
It's just like, it's just not worth it.
That could just be his disposition.
It could be.
Both of my kids, again,
But it is a trope kind of thing.
If I open the door and say,
and I could be like,
we're going to have a circus at our house
and everything that you've ever wanted
will be available to you.
They'll be like, well, I've got plans.
All you gotta do is have a suggestion
as to something that you wanna do.
And my kids will respond with why they don't wanna do it.
It's almost like, again, it's a knee jerk response.
Two out of three, that's the experience in my home too.
So yeah, it could be,
but you don't see him settling arguments
between Lily and Lando.
No, I see him- Being the negotiator.
No, what I see him doing is just like smiling
and kind of laughing at it, like shaking his head.
Right.
Like he's always like, I'm not in this fray.
Like it's not, you know, he prides himself on living a low stress life,
staying on the fringe of things, you know.
Well, I mean, I would say- Go with the flow.
What I would have said, not just about middle children,
but definitely like in Cyrus's case
with being six of nine kids, I have to believe,
and again, this is, and we're gonna jump around
a little bit here because I'm gonna get your response
as an only child to this because my,
the one thing that makes sense to me,
and I don't know, and again,
I don't know what the science says about this,
it just seems logical, is that the larger the family,
the more you had to learn to be deferential
and accommodating to people in your space.
It might be, you had, had like just something as simple as
if you shared a room with someone growing up,
you are going to be, the way that you defer to people
and the way that you see your personal space
and the way that you see your items and getting your way
is going to be different than somebody who was by themselves.
And I've always thought that that's why
you are really particular about a lot of things.
And when you think, when people try to take you
in a different direction, it's a big adjustment
because you didn't have to accommodate anybody.
And I had to do that a little bit with having one brother,
but somebody like Cyrus, who's from a family of nine,
you could talk that guy into anything, right?
Probably.
I mean, in other words-
We're gonna test it, Cyrus.
Flexibility.
Like I would think that the size of your family,
not in every case, has to have some correlation
to your personal flexibility.
Yeah, asserting your own preferences or not,
or deferring, consideration.
And sort of having an expectation,
like if your preferences always won,
then you're going to have a bigger problem
with your preferences not winning as an adult, right or wrong?
Yeah, I think so,
because it's, yeah, it's a shock to the system
when you, you know, if you just, yeah, absolutely.
Right.
I don't know if there was a,
like when I left home and went off to college
and we became roommates,
that would have been the first test of like,
oh, I'm living in the same room with somebody.
that would have been the first test of like, oh, I'm living in the same room with somebody.
I don't recall us having arguments about that at that point.
I feel like the reason that it's worked mostly well,
it might, I mean, there may be like things
that are mildly annoying to me,
but I feel like the reason that most of that has,
in fact, we were talking to Mike,
Mike McCard the other day,
and we were talking about the fact
that we were high school, college roommates,
and he was like, oh, and you're still friends.
That's the amazing thing is that you live together
during college, like that's a huge test of friendship.
Yeah.
I think a big part of it is
most of the things that you are particular about
in a living space, I kind of just don't care.
Like how cold is it in here?
I don't know.
I don't really care.
Make it the temperature that you want.
You know what I'm saying?
Like I don't have an equally strong opinion
about a lot of those things.
So I would just say, like where should this poster be?
Where should this couch be?
You had assertive parents and you had an older brother
and I had myself.
Right, and so I just tend to be like,
all right, Link's gonna have an opinion about
where this couch is and et cetera
and I don't have an opinion about it
and so why didn't he just make the decision about this?
Yeah, Hannah Batch said,
"'I'm an only child and my fiance is a middle child of four
"'and it's perfect.
"'I'm used to getting my way and he's used to letting
other people do what they want.
So in our dynamic, it does work.
I mean, if you were a firstborn,
that would be an interesting test.
If we were both only children.
If we were both only children.
We wouldn't be sitting at this table right now.
I don't think that, yeah, I think there would be
no test at all.
And I tend to be really,
I tend to be a very deferential person
when it comes to a whole slew of like,
what things look like, what things feel like,
living situation, bathroom.
I tend to be very deferential about all that stuff.
But there are things that I care a whole lot about,
but they tend to be, it tends to be a pretty narrow spectrum
of things that I care a whole lot about.
And I kind of put all my energy into those things.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I don't even know exactly what those things are,
but I think that's one of the reasons that
this has not been like a lasting source of conflict for us. Yeah. We're in a fortunate birth order situation here.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk
or your car in traffic? Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime! Hi, I'm Nick Friedman. I'm Lee Aleo mary and i'm leah president and welcome to
crunchyroll presents the anime effect it's a weekly news show with the best celebrity guests
and hot takes galore so join us every friday wherever you get your podcasts and watch full
video episodes on crunchyroll or on the crunchyroll youtube. Let's go to youngest children. So this is you.
So we're onto you.
Rachel Black said,
I'm the youngest out of my sister and I,
and I get away with a lot more,
but also don't have the high expectations put on me,
which can be both good and bad.
I mean, we kind of talked about this a little bit.
For me, this was not the case
because my parents were super consistent.
It is kind of the case with our kids,
but I think it's a combination of factors.
But without a doubt, like what Shepherd is allowed to watch,
what Shepherd is allowed to say,
what he's allowed to do is significantly more lenient.
I mean, like, you know, again,
we come from a conservative evangelical background.
Early on when Lot was really little
and he wanted to play with Pokemon cards,
like Jesse had questions about that
because of the evolution aspect of Pokemon cards.
I mean, that's how ingrained that idea was is like,
I don't know about that
because I know that those things evolve.
Right.
Just to give you a little slice of where we come from.
That one's more extreme than the Harry Potter example,
which is also true.
It's like Harry Potter really took off
before we were having kids,
but we were too old to be into it ourselves.
But eventually Lily got into it, but it wasn't,
I mean, Lando is reading Harry Potter now
and has been for a year or so.
But when Lily was, you know, nine, 10, 11 years old,
there was no Harry Potter in our house.
Right, because of the witchcraft stuff.
And because I wasn't into it,
and it was a residual of that witchcraft stuff
that was just like, practically speaking,
we're not gonna get you into that.
But now, if I went into Shepherd's room
and he was reading the adventures of Satan and his demons,
I'd be like, are you into that?
I mean, I'm just saying,
I completely, again, I'm not scared of any of that stuff.
I don't believe that it's a reality.
So in other words, like-
And we're not gonna push our kids towards something
by setting up the goads for them to kick against.
I think that's another part of our philosophy
that has shifted is, you know,
don't let fear drive set up walls.
Yeah. You know, it's more like,
let's have open conversations about things and, you know,
if there are legitimate dangers associated with things,
then let's really get into the details and discuss it
so it's not about just a blind rule
or all of a sudden there's a wall here
and it's like no questions asked.
Well, yeah, and to clarify,
I'm using the example of the adventures of Satan
and his demons as a purposely inflammatory thing
that I know is going to upset some people
because I like to do that, But it's kind of like the-
He doesn't have that book?
He does not have that book.
It was just a funny example.
But even if you think about like,
let's just talk about the Lil Nas X thing for a second,
right, and the satanic panic that's happening around that.
I do think that, rewind 10 years,
and if my kid, neither one of my kids
is would consider themselves
much of a Lil Nas X fan,
but they're both aware of the Montero video
and the controversy that it's causing.
And there was a time where I would have been afraid
to just let them watch that
and for us to have a conversation about it.
Now, I understand that the whole point of the video
is to cause the panic and cause the reaction
for branding purposes.
That's what Lil Nas X was doing from the very beginning
and a bunch of people took the bait
and got very upset about it.
I mean, it was hook, line and sinker.
They just took the bait and got upset about the video
and the shoes that had blood in them, right?
A lot of people.
And I think that now it's just like,
hey, can't we step back and just,
it isn't like, oh kids, you can do and say
whatever you want to.
It's not that there are no rules.
It's that the things that are important
and the things that are actually going to be
potentially harmful
and dangerous to them,
let's have real meaningful conversations about them.
And let's kind of say that, hey, all these things
that we thought might be dangerous and harmful
actually aren't and we can still have a conversation
about why some people see it that way.
So with our youngest kids,
there's a lot more leniency in our parenting
because we're evolving.
You know, our perspectives are evolving
and there's so much that you wanna protect your kids from
every single day.
There's so much more out there that they can be exposed to
that could be damaging.
So you've gotta be even more strategic
in choosing the right battles
because if you battle everything,
there's a sense that it just won't work.
And I think that there-
Nothing will stick.
As a very, very broad generalization,
there are two types of kids, right?
There are the kids who are going to do
the subversiveive transgressive things
and there are kids who are not going to do them.
And if you are the kind of kid who is sort of wired
to do the transgressive things and you grow up
in a really conservative atmosphere,
you are going to break bad and you're gonna break bad
in a real big way a lot of times, right?
But if you're a rule follower and you grow gonna break bad in a real big way a lot of times, right? But if you're a super, and if you're a rule follower
and you grow up in that, you might just get out okay
and just be a rule follower for the rest of your life.
Or you might get fixated on it.
Like, I mean, with Lando, he's at a stage right now.
And you know, we're figuring it out.
And what it means and kind of tracing it back
and figuring out what our path forward is.
But he gets worked up about anything
that feels like it's a violation of a rule,
not a rule, like a societal rule,
whether it's a curse word or even anything
that's offensive or embarrassing like a fart.
And again, that's not something that came from you.
No, he's very sensitive.
So for him, it's like we're trying to help him understand
a grid through which to interpret what is actually dangerous
or what does it mean for something to be offensive,
or not, so know, or not.
So that there's not unnecessarily tall walls built up around him that keeps him from truly, you know,
fully experiencing his life.
Right, so another way to say it is-
So it's like tearing down walls for him, actually.
I would say, you know, and to similar degrees lenient on our youngest kids,
but they operate with different levels of personal leniency
because they are different kids.
Oh yeah.
Again, I just think it's so much has to do
with just the disposition of the kid.
It's, I don't know, the more I parent,
the more powerless I feel as a parent.
I'm just being honest with you.
I'm just, that's my experience.
Now this aspect of being a younger child
really intrigues me from parody, Mythic Annoy.
I'm two years younger than my sister.
It's a bittersweet relationship.
One thing I hate about it is all the competition.
All my grades are compared to hers.
All my talents are compared to that of hers.
Living that way for 18 years,
I have learned to calculate my self-worth
from other people's achievements.
It's not about what I like or what I can do.
It's more about, am I better than the other person
because that is the only way my parents will accept me?
Hmm.
Wow, okay, so we've talked a lot
about my competitive nature.
We had one very infamous podcast
where I tried to convince you
that you were also competitive.
And I won that argument.
Yeah.
So, that was a joke.
I am, and I think another way to say it is,
I definitely come from a performance-based household, right?
Now, I am incredibly thankful and grateful
for the way my parents raised me
and I think I have so much to be thankful for.
I do think that they had high expectations
for performance, right?
It was like, when you brought home the good grades
and you excelled in a sport,
like you receive praise for those kinds of things.
And so I think that the way that my personality
interacted with that is I was like,
oh, I see how this game works.
And I turned a lot of things into a game
and it's turned me into a very performance-based person.
I'm an Enneagram three.
And so I kind of enter into every single arena of life
thinking about how I can win, right?
How I can come out on top of the situation,
not necessarily at the expense of other people,
but just like, I want to be good at this thing
that I am now engaging with, right?
I've never thought about it being anything to do
with birth order or in comparison to my brother until now,
until this observation was made.
So do you recall, I mean, comparing yourself,
he was older, I don't know if basketball is a good example.
I know that you guys both were like laser focused
on basketball, he was on the high school team.
You were on the JV team as a freshman,
so you were never on the same squad.
One game.
One game?
State playoffs, my freshman year,
they pulled me up to varsity and we were on the court
in the first round of the state playoffs for like a few plays.
And did you compare? And Coach Gage
just did it so that, I think he just did it
so they could be like, the McLaughlin boys
are on the floor at the same time.
Would you pass it to each other?
I mean, I was a freshman.
I was like, I'd been on JV.
I had been on JV not starting by the way, as a freshman.
Oh, so you shit your pants.
Because Coach Mace in his great wisdom
played Jason Batman before me.
Oh, you're bitter.
I am a little bit bitter about that. But Coach Gage was like, I don't know what Coach Mace is doing, but I know, you're bitter. I am a little bit bitter about that.
But Coach Gage was like,
I don't know what Coach Mace is doing,
but I know that you're good
and we're gonna bring you up to varsity
in your sophomore year, which he did.
But he also brought me up for the state playoffs.
So yeah, there was a-
You guys will be out in your front yard
on your basketball court, both doing drills.
There was a whole lot of competitiveness
between the two of us with whatever we were doing.
Like playing one-on-one.
Playing one-on-one, playing horse,
some of the most like epic, long, extended games of horse
in the summertime.
One-on-one games that would often end with me crying
and running inside because I was the younger one
and I was losing most, like almost all the time
until maybe till in high school every once in a while I might be able to win just because I was the younger one and I was losing most, like almost all the time until maybe till in high school,
every once in a while I might be able to win
just because I was getting so tall.
Uh-huh.
How tall is Cole?
Six two?
Okay. Six.
Okay, yeah.
He might have me by a couple of inches.
I think that, here's the thing,
I think that he here's the thing,
I don't, I think that he also might, I don't know if he knows what Enneagram he is,
but he's got a lot of three in him.
And so I think that he's also an achiever and a performer.
And so I don't think, again, I don't think it was,
hey, I'm a performer because I was a younger sibling.
I think that maybe both of us are that way
because there was, first of all, kind of pre-wired to that
and then growing up in a family that kind of reinforced that
so we both kind of are task and goal-oriented people.
But there was a lot of comparison.
And I don't remember, I don't remember.
Like you didn't.
My parents saying things like,
well, your brother did this, so you need to do that.
I don't remember.
I don't remember that.
You guys had a decent relationship.
I mean, from my perspective, coming over for sleepovers,
like I would interact with Cole too.
Like we would listen to music.
Yes, he would give me the LL Cool J tape
and you would play the Young MC tape
and you would both try to tell me who,
try to argue which was the coolest
and which made me feel awesome.
Like here, I was like the swing vote here,
but he was involved.
Who did I say was cooler, Young MC?
I think you had the Young MC tape, yeah.
And he had, Kuma D is cooler.
You said LL Cool J.
And Kuma, he had both of those.
He, you know, he had, he had the cooler.
Young MC is not cool.
He was cool for a moment, but no longevity.
Yeah, your brother was right at the time.
Yeah.
But my point is, when I would come over to a sleepover,
there would be interactions.
Like I would see you two interact.
It's not like he wouldn't have anything to do with me or you
because we were like so much younger.
You guys had an active relationship.
Yeah. I mean, there was a friendship component to it, right? I mean, you didn had an active relationship. Yeah.
I mean, there was a friendship component to it, right?
I mean, you didn't hate each other.
We got into a lot of fights.
I would say that, I don't know.
I don't think we were as emotionally available
to each other and reliant on each other
as I would say even Locke and Shepard are, right?
Like, and Locke and Shepard have a much larger
age difference, which can both exacerbate
and help that sort of reliance on one another.
I think in their case, it has enhanced
that emotional connection.
But I think that it wasn't until we got to be adults
that we would maybe have a conversation that was-
Heavy.
Deeper and kind of went below the surface of like,
are we talking, like as kids it was,
let's have a conversation about what we're doing
and how we're doing it better, how we could do it better,
but we're not gonna have a conversation about how we feel.
Yeah.
You know, but that was kind of also a family thing
for us too, right?
And we didn't talk a whole lot about feelings in my family.
They weren't, it wasn't that feelings were bad,
it was just that it wasn't something that talking
about feelings was not valued.
But you didn't, my persuasion is you didn't have
any buried feelings
with animosity towards your brother.
No.
I mean, the fights that you would have as in,
you know, he would pick on you
about having a crush on somebody
and then you would get really angry.
And I remember him running back into his room
and you had a stick of deodorant in your hand and you threw it at his door
that he just slammed in your face.
And I think it made a hole in the door.
I think it may have dented it.
Yeah, and I think the thing about that is that-
I was like, I'm glad I'm an only child.
He would see-
I wanna get hit with deodorant.
He would see that he could get you to join in
and that would make me very mad.
If he recruited my friends to be a part of this thing,
like that's harder to deal with than just him doing it.
But he would also do this thing where he would,
this isn't something, no one really talked about this,
but I've seen this with Lock and Shepard.
Now this is an older, younger thing I've seen quite a bit.
He would talk about how it was gonna be so difficult for me
when I got to fill in the blank grade.
He'd be like, when you get to fourth grade,
it's gonna rock your world.
And then I would get to fourth grade
and it would be just as fun as first grade.
I always loved school and never thought
that it was difficult, right?
And- So it never difficult, right? And-
So you know, it never worked, he never scared you? Every time I would get to the grade, it would be fine.
And it became a,
it became this funny, like recurring joke in my family.
It's like, well, Rhett's in seventh grade now
and he says it's okay.
You know, so Cole definitely would warn me about things.
That had happened quite a bit.
I'm super jealous of not having an older brother.
When it comes to music is one thing.
That's why I brought that up is that,
or whatever the case, whether it's like any terms,
like my development was stunted, I believe.
You know, when you have an older brother,
like you're talking about,
you're observing Cole with his girlfriend
and figuring out, you know,
kind of between the lines of what they're up to,
you know, might be, you know,
you're gaining confidence that I know this guy,
I live with this guy, this guy's ridiculous.
If he can have a girlfriend, I can have a girlfriend.
You know, it was like, I had so little confidence
to even have a girlfriend.
And I felt like I missed out on that.
When it came to music, it was just exposure to cool things
that were kind of above my head or movies, you know?
Yeah, most of the kids who end up introducing you
to the things that are for older kids
usually have an older brother.
Right.
Like Lando watches, I mean,
he's got a lot of stipulations
about what he'll allow himself to enjoy.
Again, it's self-imposed, but for us, it's like,
again, we wanna watch things that we enjoy
and he's just along for the ride.
You know, whereas with the younger kids,
when the first kids were younger,
it was more just catering to things that were age specific.
But by the time you get to three, it's just like,
hey, you're gonna be stretched a little bit
because there's other people pulling
the median age of this whole group up.
And again, that's not a birth order thing.
That's a personality thing because most,
well, in my experience personally,
in my experience with my family,
and what I would say is my anecdotal evidence,
most younger kids are excited about getting to do
the things that their older siblings were about getting to do the things
that their older siblings were not allowed to do.
Like the idea of getting away with something,
watching something that you're not supposed to watch,
like that's, most kids are kind of like,
they don't impose their own centers like Lando does.
And so I just think, again,
that's not a birth order family dynamic thing.
I just think it's like,
this is how these particular kids are wired.
I wanted to bring up another dynamic.
I love when we put out these prompts
and then we get back something that wasn't on our radar.
And I'm not talking about if you're a twin,
because we've made an executive decision
that we're not talking about twins.
They creep me out and I don't wanna have nothing to do with.
Speaking of the devil.
So they are-
The twins are a result of the devil's activities.
You guys are out.
Triplets, whoa, don't get me started on that.
Don't even say the word quadruplets.
Oh my gosh.
But I thought this is great.
I'll bundle these three together.
If you have a sibling with special needs.
Ashley tweeted, I'm the youngest with just an older brother.
My brother has autism.
It's weird being the youngest by age,
but being treated like the oldest for most things.
I'm more of a parent than a sister to him.
Love my brother to death though,
and wouldn't change a thing.
Sophia responded, said,
"'Being the younger sibling of an autistic child
"'has been tough at times,
"'but it has also given me compassion and patience
"'at the times I needed it the most.'"
And then Caroline responded,
"'Also younger sibling.
"'I'm the youngest, but one of my older brothers is disabled
and has always needed round the clock care.
I'm now a special school teacher
and have a passion for helping disabled students
find purpose.
I love the fact that we got these responses
to expand this conversation.
It's interesting that all three of them
are younger siblings
who have an older special need sibling.
Obviously that's not always the case,
but I think it's a little more unexpected that,
okay, as a younger sibling,
you're not getting away with more,
you're having this older sibling experience.
And it's, you know, being a part of a family,
dynamic like this, you learn things
that a lot of us never have,
I will say the privilege of learning,
expand who you are.
I love, you know, when they're all saying,
I wouldn't change it for the world.
I've grown so much as a person,
I've accessed a level of compassion and patience
that develops me.
I mean, it's extremely difficult.
And I don't have any personal experience with this,
but everyone that I know who has a family member
with special needs has this increased sort of appreciation
has this increased sort of appreciation for life.
And I don't mean like, oh, I'm so glad that I'm not in this situation,
but no, like being in the relationship
with a person who has special needs
has like given them a perspective on life
that is like deeper.
And it's not, you know, you got Caroline saying
that she is helping disabled students
find purpose.
I also think that disabled people help us find purpose.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I think that that is a really common theme
that you see in people who have members of their families
who have special needs is that they have not been,
now, first of all, okay, yes,
in lots of cases, maybe there is a burden aspect to it
and that this is a lot of work,
this is a lot of attention,
there's a lot of sacrifices that are made by parents
and by siblings, of course, that's an aspect.
I can only, I can't imagine
because I don't have that experience.
But at the same time,
I think that there's a huge blessing that comes with that.
And I think you're seeing that
in these mythical beasts who shared.
As we shift to the only child responses,
you know, I'm just very,
I'm just struck with how much you are shaped
by the environment you grew up in, in terms of like, again, it's not just about birth order,
but it's about additional personalities in your home.
And like the deeply intimate level of exposure
you have to people who are, you know,
either adults or developing kids at different ages.
It's just, I mean, it has to have an impact
on how you develop at least in the short term
when you're in that situation,
in comparison to being an only child.
Being in people's mess and understanding,
you just really get to know people
when you are related to them and live with them and living on top of each other.
And yeah, so I do feel like I missed out.
Bree Shear tweeted,
"'Growing up being an only child was awful.
Wow, I was so lonely.
I always wanted a sibling
and constantly annoyed my parents to give me one."
He said, give me a sibling.
Well, you know, there's a process involved.
Yeah, well, a story.
Did you want this?
I have a lot of,
I don't recall ever asking for a sibling.
I mean, you know, my mom,
because I had the half sister
and then there was the divorce
and it was just like, well,
it's like, okay, mom is single.
It's just the two of us.
It just wasn't an environment to like,
hope for a sibling.
It's just that it didn't seem like
that was something that was gonna happen.
I think maybe there are some kids that would have been like, oh, I hope she gets married and then I'll have like, there'll be a sibling. It's just that it didn't seem like that was something that was gonna happen. I think maybe there's some kids that would have been like,
oh, I hope she gets married and then I'll have like,
there'll be a baby.
Like, did you ever think?
I don't think so.
Yeah, I don't think so.
Did you ever hang out with babies and think,
oh, I would like one of these in my house?
She had a, her friend Donna, I remember,
had like this cute
little toddler daughter.
And I remember like being infatuated with her
as like in a younger sister kind of way,
like holding the baby or playing with the toddler.
And like, I mean, I had a few baby dolls myself.
And I don't know if that was some sort,
I think there was a, it was more of a,
it's so, you know, these babies are so cute,
but maybe there was a loneliness thing.
I definitely remember being in my room,
even when I had the stepsister, you know,
the age difference was such that like,
we really didn't have a relationship.
I would be in my room a lot,
listening to the radio or playing with my GI Joes.
You know, I've told the story.
I didn't listen to the radio or music for the longest time
because my stepsister liked music.
Yeah.
I just wanted to assert.
You gotta differentiate yourself.
Myself.
But yeah, I mean, and I was certainly lonely
and I had this, I mean,
Sav tweeted at us, S-A-V,
Sikvana, as an only child from Harnett County
with a single mom, what, just like me?
I felt like I was socially behind my peers.
It wasn't until college that I found and developed
a personality and opinions that were wholly my own.
I struggle with boundaries of oversharing
and self-isolation.
I often resent not having a sibling to confide in
who could understand exactly where I'm coming from
without the judgment that a parent might have.
Even when I know my parents want the best for me,
it's still a lot of pressure and responsibility
to be a good daughter.
So, I mean, I relate to being socially stunted.
You had a voracious appetite to spend the night
at other kids' homes of any age.
Yeah.
And that's so strange to me.
Insatiable.
I mean, as close as we became,
I know I was very anxious to go spend the night
at your house or other kids' homes, and I rarely did it.
I just didn't, and then whenever I would go over
and we would interact with the other kids
in the neighborhood,
it was a high anxiety situation for me, looking back on it.
Like I just wasn't, I wasn't used to being around
a bunch of boisterous, assertive kids.
I definitely remember in preschool being afraid
of all the other boys and I would hang out with the girls
because at least they were chilled out.
Well, but you also went to like a preschool
kind of daycare situation earlier than I did.
I did, yeah.
I did preschool out here actually in Thousand Oaks
was the first, but again, yeah,
it's funny because I actually am more on the introverted
side as an adult.
I'm fine with large groups of people and I can adapt to it and I don't have a lot of anxiety.
It's just, it's not my preference.
My preference is to be alone, right?
But it's weird that as a kid,
my preference was very much like,
it's almost like I got it all out of the way.
It was like-
And we change over time in that way too.
Yeah, so I- It's not locked in got it all out of the way. It was like- And we change over time in that way too. Yeah, so I-
It's not locked in, that's for sure.
Because I actually consider you,
I mean, I don't know,
you're kind of borderline introvert, extrovert, I think.
I'm trying to figure out how much this pandemic
has influenced that about me,
because I'm noticing that I really have to make up my mind
to get out of my house and my comfort zone
and my very small plans.
And you know, so I'm in this,
I'm in a transition period of like getting back out
into the world as a lot of us are.
But back in the day as a kid,
I think it was,
I had, I caught up, but I had a lot of catching up to do
by high school.
And I was, and we've talked about this before,
but I never perceived any of this.
Like I did not have any perception
that you were uncomfortable.
I mean, okay, yeah, we went to Camp Carraway
and you didn't take a dump the entire week,
but I was just like, okay, I mean, it happens.
Sometimes shit doesn't happen.
Right?
But I don't remember thinking like,
I mean, maybe my mom was like,
you know, Link is having her,
she never told me that, at least I don't remember,
Link is really nervous about this week
and you need to help him.
Right.
I didn't have any idea that you were
not having a great time that I was having.
Like every single thing that we were doing,
I was just like, everything about this is awesome.
I tend to think that about everything that I'm experiencing,
I tend to think that I inflate it and make it even better
than it actually is before and after and during, right?
I don't know where that comes from,
but I never had any indication that you weren't just having
as great of a time as I was having.
Yeah, for me, I mean, if I try to get specific to like,
if you have an older sibling, who's gonna hold you down
and drip spit from their mouth and dangle it onto your face.
Never hit my face.
Again, right.
A lot of control.
It never hit your face.
So you learn it's like this guy's all bark, no bite.
But for some-
We never punch each other in the face.
You never punch each other in the face.
We did the old Charlie horse.
That was our go-to.
But for me, I had to learn this out in the,
with like acquaintances.
It's like, this person is boisterous.
I don't know what they're up against.
Do they, does this kid have a knife?
None of the kids had knives, but it,
and I don't recall fixating on knives,
but I'm just using an example of like,
I had to assess these things and come to these,
experience how people put on certain ways.
And that doesn't necessarily mean that they can back it up
or that that's the complete picture of who they are.
The more people you live with and grow up with,
the more you realize we're all full of shit
and we're all, you know, we're all putting on our masks
and protecting ourselves.
Cause you can see through that in your own home.
I just have one person in my home for most of my,
you know, growing up.
So I just had that data point.
But the science says that, again,
you catch up and you're okay.
Again, I just don't know how much,
I mean, I think that the whole,
I definitely think that the whole feeling like you're behind and like, oh, I'm hearing't know how much, I mean, I think that the whole, I definitely think that the whole feeling
like you're behind and like, oh, I'm hearing this
for the first time because I didn't have an older brother
or older sister to tell me, that completely makes sense.
But the like anxiety or I don't trust this person,
I tend to think that it's just personality.
Sure, sure, has a lot to think that it's just personality. Sure, sure.
Has a lot to do with it.
I mean, I wonder if my kids ask me
how many kids I should have.
I mean, we're in such a different world now,
but I think my inclination based on my experience
is to not, and I'll even make a joke with people sometimes.
It goes something like this.
Congratulations on the new baby.
You know, you need to go ahead and have another one
because you don't want to, only child.
You don't want to do that.
You don't want to do that to your kids.
There's not really a joke in there.
And then they're like,
well, that's what we were planning on doing.
We're in Los Angeles and we just want one child.
I know, I try not to tell people how many kids to have
unless they ask me and no one ever asked me, so I know.
So you just tell them, anyway.
If I'm pressed to give advice,
it would be don't just have one kid.
It's better.
It's better on everybody to have a second one,
except for the parents, I think.
So either don't have children
or if you're gonna have children, have two kids.
Yeah.
Or three?
I'm happy that we have three.
I can't imagine having four and I'm so, I mean like,
he really slipped under the wire there, you know?
Barely got through and I'm glad he did,
but there's never ever a point in my mind
that I wish I had a fourth kid.
Well, there are times. Never.
There are times.
Christy sometimes seems like she wants a baby again
and I'm like, ah!
Like I have this reaction. Well, it's funny
because Jessie, I would say multiple times a year, right?
Because Jessie, I would say multiple times a year, right?
Maybe she'll be a day late and then she'll be like,
and she'll be like, what if I'm pregnant? Like she imagines what it would feel like to be pregnant.
And thus far it's definitely seemed like
she's staring into an abyss of doom.
Well, you can't help her with it.
Imagining what it would be like to be pregnant
is a good exercise because that is not a,
that's a tough experience.
Having another child or having a baby
is a thing that somehow some people still think is a great experience. Having another child or having a baby is a thing that somehow some people
still think is a great idea.
Well, so there's definitely nothing about,
there's nothing from Jessie
that is where she's excited about it, right?
And again, I'm very, very unlikely
to make my wife pregnant at this point,
having had a vasectomy.
Not impossible, but very unlikely to make my wife pregnant at this point, having had a vasectomy. Not impossible, but very unlikely, right?
So for me, it all just boils down to the fact
that I've always wanted a daughter
and my only daughter is Barbara.
And I treat her like a little girl.
And I talked to her about all the,
that she can achieve anything that she wants.
And girl power, all my girl power sort of encouragement goes to my dog.
And that's kind of cool in one sense,
but it's a little bit sad because Barbara's gonna die
at some point.
Before she gets to be the age
where she would go off to college, she's gonna die.
Yeah, I'm glad that we experienced a daughter and sons
and that dynamic having a daughter first I'm glad that we experienced daughter and sons
and that dynamic having a daughter first and like the whole bossiness we talked about,
like I think that really played into like her personality
and stuff like that.
But like, as opposed to having a,
if Lincoln was first and Lily was in the middle,
who knows, everything will be different maybe.
So I think it all has an impact,
but then it doesn't have this lasting,
like deterministic impact at the same time.
Well, speaking of twins, we can close with this.
This is where twins are actually really helpful, right?
Is, and I'm not talking about like planned twin experiments,
but there are some sort of just circumstantial experiments
where twins grow up in different environments
for they got separated at birth or whatever.
I don't know the results of those,
so I'm not gonna speak about it,
but that is the only way to know what you just talked about,
which is like, well, what would Lily be like
if she wasn't the oldest child?
Is that she had a twin that grew up in a different place
or better yet a triplet or a quadruplet
and they all grew up in different places.
Well, I hope nobody comes out of the woodwork.
I mean, the author of the book,
"'The Sibling Effect, What the Bonds Among Brothers
and Sisters Reveal About Us,
Jeffrey Kluger said,
"'For plenty of us, the only ones left
"'at the end of the dance will be the ones who brung us.
"'The brothers and sisters who have been with us the longest,
"'loved us the hardest, and by a wide margin,
"'know us the best.'"
So if you got a sibling that you love,
send them some love today.
And if you don't, we'll send you some love right now.
I do think that that's a good point.
It's one thing to have parents who know you
and when you're like us and you've lived sort of a weird,
unexpected life and being able to be successful in a medium
where we become these public figures
that more people know us than we know people, right?
Because of our faces being out there.
And almost everyone who has a perception of who we are
has an incorrect perception of who we are.
People- Incomplete at least.
Like or don't like whatever,
their perception of us is a projection
that we have chosen to curate and put on the internet.
Now, it's pretty personal, it's pretty real,
but it is a curation, right?
If you're a fan of us, you like us,
you don't like who we are and who we would be
if you were to live with us
or if you were to have grown up with us.
Now having parents who can kind of always ground you
and always bring you back down to who you really are
is one thing.
It is another thing to have a sibling,
to have someone who is in your generation
who knows exactly who you are
and sees you for exactly who you are.
And I think that that's something
that my brother can do fairly well,
is when I have a conversation with him,
having a conversation with him is by default,
a grounding experience, right?
It's not like he's trying to bring,
he's not trying to ground me,
he's not trying to bring me down.
Right. But you just,
when you've got somebody who knows you apart
from the curated public image,
and this could be good friends too, I mean,
it's one of the reasons that people who are
like super famous celebrities who have created
sort of a cocoon of people pleasers around them tend to be these narcissistic monsters.
It's people who regardless of what level of, you know,
society they have ascended to quote unquote,
have people who know exactly who they are
and will tell them exactly what they think.
That's a healthy thing.
And I think that siblings,
you need a sibling because of that.
I guess you just got me.
Yeah, you're the closest thing I got.
And we use the marriage analogy
more than the sibling analogy because it's,
because when there's no blood,
then if you can end at any moment.
Will there be blood?
We're not blood related.
We will never be blood.
If we punch each other in the face, there might be.
Okay, you can deflect at this point, but I'm saying,
yeah, there is something different in our relationship
than you have with your brother because of that,
the way the bond was determined,
like there's something to the blood of it all, right? It's like you can't, it's immutable.
Yeah.
And so that, and plus he's not in your,
you're not working with him every single day
and we're not just friends,
you got this business that we're, and this brand and everything that we're not just friends, you got this business that we're,
and this brand and everything that we're creating together
is an extremely connecting and complicating factor
in this conversation.
But that's why you have something with Cole
in those conversations that,
yeah, I guess I don't have anybody in that sense.
And you're not it.
I just don't have it.
Maybe you can get like a brother for hire.
I'm okay, I'm good enough.
You can't recreate that anyway.
I would just rather get my way more often in other senses.
Okay, well, that will continue.
Just to play, yes, just to play the only child card.
So you've got a brother, I've got the only child card.
Okay, it all evens out.
Let us know what you think.
Thank you for those of the hundreds of you
who interacted with us on Twitter.
You got a rec?
We'll keep the conversation going.
In the meantime, I do have a rec in effect,
complete left turn, unrelated to everything
that we're talking about, just a book that I'm reading.
It is actually super relevant right now.
I found myself wanting to read this book
because one of the interesting things that has happened
as we're kind of coming out of the pandemic and things are getting back to normal is,
oh, what do you know?
Mass shootings are a thing again in America, right?
Sadly, tragically.
And there's all this debate about the Second Amendment.
And I just found myself thinking, you know,
I don't really, I hear people say things
about the second amendment
and I either didn't pay attention
when we talked about this in class
or I was never taught it.
And so I was like, I'm gonna start maybe reading
about the history of the second amendment
and its formulation.
So I read this book or I'm like three quarters
of the way through it.
The Second Amendment, a biography by Michael Waldman.
Not a brand new book, I think it was written in 2014.
Won some awards, is highly regarded
as a great comprehensive sort of exploration
of the history of the Second Amendment.
I started realizing there was so little that I knew
and understood about the formation
of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
I couldn't, I'm just gonna be honest with you,
I couldn't have told you that the Bill of Rights
was like the first list of amendments
that was added to the Constitution after it was written.
I think I could have told you that, but only that.
Like I knew, I couldn't have told you that,
and I didn't know exactly why it happened
and what it was a reaction to
and what the concerns were at the time.
I was pretty ignorant of this.
So if you're also ignorant of it,
or you just happen to be interested in this kind of thing,
I recommend, it's a short read and it's an easy read.
It's not like super academic or anything.
The Second Amendment, a biography by Michael Waldman,
just a nice introduction to this,
which I think then does influence the way that we think
about this very divisive and inflamed,
but very important debate that we're having this very divisive and inflamed,
but very important debate that we're having in our country as we're trying to navigate being the country
that leads in a lot of things,
including by a long shot and by a large margin,
people who get killed by gun violence.
The Second Amendment, a biography, Michael Waldman.
All right, y'all, hashtag Ear Biscuits.