Avoid making comparisons of any kind - not to your children and not at any time they may be privy to the conversation. Focus on the gifts in each of your children and capitalize on their differences.
Encourage your children to express their resentment or angry feelings. This does not mean you allow them to scream at or hurt each other. Teach your children to handle their anger constructively, not destructively. Acknowledge and validate your children's feelings so they feel understood. Help each child see things from the other child's perspective.
Have very clear boundaries about personal belongings and personal space. Make it a rule that no one is allowed to use another person's belongings without permission. Teach your children to respect each other's personal space - bedrooms, their bodies, etc. A child needs to feel like there are at least some things that belong to him.
Avoid situations that promote guilt in siblings. Don't allow them to do something they will regret later. Teach them self-control. And remember comparing produces guilty feelings.
Teach your children to settle their own differences. This doesn't mean you allow them to have a knock down drag out fight. It means you teach them what respectful behavior looks like and how to compromise and work together. Have them practice these behaviors until they become the norm.
Help your children live a balanced and healthy life. Stress can play a big role in children's moods and ability to handle everyday situations. Monitor the amount of activities your children participate in. Make sure they get plenty of sleep, eat well, exercise, and take time for quiet relaxation.
Introduce a "value" of the month program. Teach and reinforce family values like respect, cooperation, peace, and kindness - focus on one value per month. Use family devotionals, games, books, and movies that help the children understand and practice these values.
Spend one on one time with each child. Children are always fighting for individual attention from their parents. They don't want to have to share the one or two most important people of their life. Make a point to give each child your undivided attention and quality time with you on a regular basis. Make a family ritual. On Tuesday night, Joey gets special "mommy time" and on Thursday Sally gets the same.
Have family fun nights. Encourage family togetherness by instituting a family fun night. Sit down and play games together or go play miniature golf. One rule: No fighting or family time is over. Make this time sacred for everyone in the family.
Hold weekly family meetings. This is a time when the family comes together to talk about their concerns and brainstorm solutions. All family members are encouraged to share and all communication is healthy and respected.
Sibling rivalry can really add to the stress of family life. If you actively implement some of these strategies, you will begin to see improvements. Keep working at it. The reward of having healthy and loving adult sibling relationships is well worth the effort you make.
