Fights, favoritism, age gaps, and the everyday patterns that shape how your kids will know each other for life.
Most parents of more than one child eventually realize that the relationship between their kids is something they shape, not just observe. The texture of brothers and sisters who later say "we are close" is mostly built in the small moments of childhood — and so is the texture of brothers and sisters who avoid each other forty years later.
This page is about the everyday version of that work. Fights, favoritism, age gaps, the kid who feels overlooked, and the patterns that compound either way.
What is normal, what isn’t
Sibling fights are normal. The same children who attack each other over a Lego brick will defend each other on the playground an hour later. Most squabbles are part of how kids learn to negotiate, share, and recover. The patterns worth paying attention to are different:
Persistent imbalance. One child consistently dominates the other in ways that do not let up. Power is real even at age six.
Specific contempt. Mocking, name-calling, deliberate humiliation. Different from heated argument.
Physical aggression that is not part of play. Some rough-and-tumble is normal. Hitting that is meant to hurt is not.
One child going quiet. A previously vocal sibling who has stopped participating, withdrawing from the other, is often communicating something the louder pattern is masking.
Patterns inherited from adults. Sometimes the way two kids treat each other is a faithful copy of how the adults in the house treat them.
The favoritism question
Almost no parent thinks they have a favorite. Almost every kid in a sibling pair can name which one of them they think the parents prefer. The honest middle: most parents click more easily with one child at a particular life stage and have to do the work of evening it out. That is not a moral failing; it is a parenting reality.
What helps:
Separate one-on-one time with each child. Even thirty minutes a week. The "we never get just you" feeling builds slowly and corrodes for decades.
Different, not equal. Trying to make every birthday, gift, and outing exactly equal misses the point. Children mind unfairness much less than they mind feeling unseen.
Watch for the "easy" kid getting less attention. The child who is no trouble is often the child who is being parented least. They notice.
Resist labels that stick. "The smart one," "the troublemaker," "the funny one," "the sensitive one." Useful as nicknames; punishing as identities. Kids grow up trying to live up to or fight against the label.
Age gaps
Different gaps create different dynamics, and none is "right." Some honest patterns:
Close in age (under three years). Often very intense — much rivalry, much closeness. Parents are tired. The children may compete for the same toys, friends, and attention for years.
Medium gap (three to five years). Less competition for the same developmental milestones. Often easier on the parents, sometimes less close as friends in childhood.
Wider gap (six years or more). Often closer to a "two only-children" dynamic. Older sibling can mentor or resent; younger can idolize or feel left behind. The relationship often deepens in adulthood once they are both adults.
Whatever the gap, the dynamic is shaped much more by how the parents talk about each child to the others than by the spacing.
How to handle fights
Most parents reflexively try to be the judge. "Who started it?" The judging usually backfires — one child feels exonerated, the other resented, and both learn to fight harder for the parent’s verdict next time.
What tends to work better:
Separate first if needed. No useful conversation is happening when both kids are flooded.
Hear both sides briefly. Not to judge — to acknowledge.
Coach the resolution rather than impose one. "What can each of you do differently the next ten minutes?" Children solving their own conflicts builds the skill; adults solving them does not.
Address patterns separately, not in the heat. If one child is consistently aggressive or one consistently provocative, address that with each child one-on-one in a calm moment.
Don’t parent the older child to be the responsible one. "You should know better, you are older" puts an unfair load on the older child for years.
When one child has more needs
If one child has a chronic illness, a disability, a learning difference, or is going through an extended hard time, attention naturally tilts. The other children almost always feel this even when nobody talks about it.
Name the situation, age-appropriately. Kids do better with the truth than with a vacuum they fill in with worse stories.
Protect specific time for the other children. Not vague "we love you too" but specific, regular, just-them time.
Resist using the well sibling as a co-caregiver. Some helping is healthy; "you have to be the responsible one" as a permanent role is not.
Look for what the other children are not saying. Quiet acceptance can be hiding real grief, anger, or fear.
Blended families
Bringing two sets of children together creates a different dynamic, slower than parents usually expect. Some patterns worth knowing:
Children rarely "blend" on the timeline parents hope for. Years, not months, is more realistic.
Loyalty bind: kids may feel that liking a step-sibling betrays their other parent. Going slow and not forcing closeness helps.
House rules that are the same for all children land better than rules that visibly differ between his and hers.
Each child also still needs one-on-one time with their own parent. Especially in the early years, the new family does not replace the old relationship.
The siblings as adults
The sibling relationships you build now are the ones your children will navigate for the rest of their lives — through their own marriages, their parents’ aging, your funeral. Adults who grew up in households where sibling differences were named and respected, where favoritism was kept in check, and where the kids were not pitted against each other tend to be closer in adulthood. It does not always work; sometimes adult siblings drift anyway. But the foundation is much harder to lay later.
When to bring in help
A family therapist, school counselor, or pediatrician is worth talking to if a sibling pattern is persistent, escalating, involving real harm, or visibly distressing one or more children. Bullying-level dynamics between siblings are not "just kids being kids" — they predict adult difficulty and can usually be addressed earlier than later.