Do you think it's right for parents to have favorites?

I didn't bother asking "is it normal for parents to have favorites" cause I know everyone's gonna say yes.

So instead, I'll ask this: do you think it's right, or ok for parents to have favorites when it comes to their children?

Yes 23
No 94
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Comments ( 19 )
  • alv1592

    Definitely no. You brought them all into the world equally, so why would you love one more? Plus they'll probably be able to tell, since you may give the favourite more attention without realising it. I don't even favour one of my pets over the other, so I definitely wouldn't play favourites if I ever have children.

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  • bananaface

    Well, as far as I'm aware, they can't really help it. I think it's wrong to act on it, though, and give the favourite special treatment.

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  • Ldizzy1234

    Of course not. Just like its not right for teachers or really anybody else to have favorites. I hate favoritism. I've never been anybodys favorite. :(

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  • Saycheese

    I don't think it's right for parents to have a favorite. But it happens more often then it should. I can see why it happens too; either they have a child that is more disciplined, a child that has more of the same traits or the child might be more easy to educate. Or it can even be in reverse.

    I have a friend that has a brother with Autism and she has told a me several times that she feels left out and I know she doesn't really want to tell me but she still does because she knows I won't say anything. Her mom always pays attention to her brother and seems to get ticked off if her daughter wants attention. But at the same time I'm really not there to know what is going on but knowing her mother I guess I could see it. :\ My friend never wants to be home much anymore because of it; she loves being free and hanging with her college friends. I truely am rather surprised that she hasn't gotten into trouble as much as she has. But I'm really glad she hasn't and that she is really enjoying her life. :)

    I also have a feeling that my brother felt that way, even though thats not what was going on. I was going through a lot of things I'd ratehr not mention when I was little so of course my parents had to pay more attention to me. But luckly my twin brother had our older brother to look out on him too. My parents of course didn't ignore that he existed but they had to watch me more closely. I sometimes wonder if it did affect him in any manner because we both kind of just reversed. I use to be the quite reserved one and he was jsut a hyper crazy kid now it reversed. I'm more open and talk a lot and he is rather reserved and wants more privacy.

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  • *~ThePurplePixie~*

    This is one of the toughest questions for a twin mother - tricky.
    Personally, I think having favourites is terrible for children.
    My two are so different - like identical in form, but individual in mind - they're 5, and James is a little more outgoing, and a bit 'louder', whilst Samuel is a touch quieter and more intimate - but both equally studious, and I love them both the same.
    I am actually quite cautious of favouring one over the other, so I even make sure I kiss each goodnight the same amount!

    xx

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  • nAt2017

    It's not right, but it's inevitable.

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  • Well I'm my mothers only child but I'm my dads favorite by far, ironically so as he left my mother and I to start a new family. Being the favorite I don't have an issue with favorites haha. But his reasons are purely superficial

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  • FocoUS

    Absolutely not.

    My older sister was the star child. Growing up like that was awful. She was the smart one I was the other one. (I actually scored top 25% in my high school so I was a good student I just wasn't top 10%) My sister took an engineering major I took animation. In my sister's third year of college she had a complete breakdown. She switched majors without telling the family. She even had the gall to tell us she got an offer to work on the James Webb space telescope. I thought she was a fucking rocket scientist. We were all ready to see the first child graduate college, but we just found a million excuses and the next day when the newspaper had a list of graduates guess who's name didn't show up.

    So my big sis was labeled the liar and the shame. And my mother looked at me and said "I guess you're the rock now." I can't describe a time when I was angrier at my family. My entire life my parents told me to be more like my sister and in one minute I get "well I guess you're the favorite now." And my sister she acted so high and mighty about her NASA job making me feel like shit and it never fucking existed. I don't know how to describe what I felt at that moment.

    Me and my sister have this weird relationship where we're very close to each other because we understand how hard it was growing up with great expectation. At the same time we also resent each other because we were raised competing to be the better.

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  • NeuroNeptunian

    It's normal.

    I don't believe that my parents had favorites, but I think that, as the first born and as a very stubborn personality, my parents took out the brunt of their frustration with life and each other on me.

    I think it is normal for a parent to have favorites, though. As a little bit of unexplained intuition on my part, I suspect that if I have multiple children, one of them will be very much like me and I will probably cut that kid more slack because I will be most able to relate to them and see their point of view. I hope that I extend the same courtesy to all of my kids but I can see myself being more lax towards a kid if they are much like me. However, if they are too much like me, they might not be my favorite. Opposites attract and what is alike repels.

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    • I know it's probably the norm for parents to have favorites, but I'm asking if you think it's RIGHT for parents to have favorites, whether it's normal or not.

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      • NeuroNeptunian

        It's not right for anyone to have a favorite of anything because it implies a level of discrimination, so no, it's not right but it's natural.

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  • It happens to almost all parents but they are never supposed to show it. A parent that shows it is weak and selfish.

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  • right or not -it just happens.

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  • LPrttyktty2791

    I disagree that parents necessarily have favorites, although this CAN be true I think it is far from inevitable. Maybe you all "rank" relationships from best to worst, but really, how do you compare two or more completely different people?? Unless they are adults, how do you even know if you prefer the personality of one over the other? They aren't even finished forming their personality yet! And some ages are super annoying-- I find 9-12 year olds super trying, they aren't cute anymore and they aren't adult enough to give parents much of a break. If by "favorite" you mean right now, one kid is just more fun and makes you happier than the other, I guess I can see that, but I wouldn't call that a favorite. I think most parents who have favorites view their kids more as possessions and reflections on them than they do as independent people with their own lives to live. When you think "I only have my kid for 18-25 years to make them into awesome people, and my influence diminishes way before that" rather than "this kid makes ME happier", I think it is unlikely you will have favorites. I don't even have a favorite among my nieces, I can't imagine having one among my own kids.

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  • Corleone

    It's not right, but it's inevitable

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  • Shackleford96

    Being the youngest child of two siblings, of course I would say that I don't have any problems with it. Lol.

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  • the_misty_haze

    I have a favorite between my two sons. They will never know this. I make sure they both have the same things. The same discipline etc etc. I give lots of love to both of them and play with them both all the time. I would never never NEVER make this evident or tell the favored child he is favored. That's not fair for either child. But deep inside I just relate to one son more. I also find him more affectionate and sweet. But that's besides the point.

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  • dappled

    I think it's okay as long as the favouritism isn't acted on too much. It's obvious that my sister is the favourite. And it was embarrassingly obvious that I was my grandma's favourite.

    Although I will say that some of the lack of favouritism was not my fault but my grandfather's. He was charming and social, always had a crowd around him at the pub, had a strong mathematical flair, an eye for the ladies, got into comically bizarre situations, but began to let people down, and eventually really let the family down by ending up in prison. My father was both intimidated and let-down by him. Apart from the prison part (yet, anyway) he sees me as a carbon copy and, as the parent rather than the child, he is able to show his ire and punish me for what his own father did. I was never going to win that one.

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    • VioletTrees

      That sounds really awful and unhealthy. I'm sorry. D:

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