Relationship with sibling

People described their relationships with their siblings. They talked about emotional and practical sides to their relationships and how these changed over time. People found similarities to typical sibling relationships, but also considerable differences, such as the level of responsibility they felt for their sibling.

‘It’s like a normal brother and sister thing really, but without the speech’

Several people said that they had typical sibling relationships. Their sibling could annoy them to bits, but they were also very close. Many acknowledged that while their relationship is different in many ways than other sibling relationships, it was ‘normal’ to them. Their sibling’s behaviour could be unusual or unpredictable but they had grown up with them and so ‘had to get on with it’.

Graham is pleased to have a close relationship with his brother; unlike a lot of his friends.

Age at interview 24

Gender Male

View profile

Eloise thinks most big sisters find their younger brother a pain, but she couldnt understand why…

Age at interview 18

Gender Female

View profile

In terms of spending time with their siblings, people talked about different things including ‘just hanging out’, eating, tickling, playing computer games and going shopping together. Some younger siblings were in residential schools and a few people found visiting them there ‘a bit upsetting’. They preferred their sibling to come home.

Steph is very close to her brother, who has profound autism and a language disorder, and enjoys…

Age at interview 26

Gender Female

View profile

‘I always lend my mum a hand babysitting, or getting him out and about’

Most people took on considerable responsibility for their siblings when they were growing up. Most talked about looking after them, or protecting them at school. Some helped their parents by stepping in and supporting their sibling, or by not making a fuss if something wasn’t going right for them. Many described a unique relationship with their sibling and were able to interact with them in a way that many other people couldn’t. For example, some had developed their own form of sign language, or had found particular ways of diffusing tensions, such as playing pool or watching films together. A few talked about ‘pushing the boundaries’ with their sibling and encouraging them to do new things. This included going out to different places, encouraging them to extend the range of music they listened too, or the television programmes they watched.

Steph has made sure that her relationship with her brother has changed as hes grown older. She…

Age at interview 26

Gender Female

View profile

‘It was almost as though I didn’t feel connected to him as a brother’

While some people said they were very close to their siblings, a few had very different experiences. They felt very distant from them and, as one person said, fought or avoided them. This was sometimes because the sibling was in a residential school or home and so their lives were not closely intertwined. One young woman said that she had become less accepting of her brother’s strangeness as she grew older and she was glad she would be able to leave home at some point. A few other people said they left home quite young ‘which says quite a lot’.

Lucy sometimes gets on with her brother but they generally just avoid each other.

Age at interview 18

Gender Female

View profile

‘I haven’t been able to grow up and share certain things with him’

The biggest difference from many sibling relationships was that the relationship was one way; people were not able to share their feelings, confidences, worries or concerns with their sibling. This was because their siblings were only interested in specific things relating to their own interests, had not grasped the skills of social interaction, or were not able to communicate effectively with them. Several said that their siblings could be affectionate and loving, but not able or willing to interact with them in a way they would have liked. As one woman said, ‘I don’t get a, ‘Hi! How are you?’ He never, never asks about me at all, which hurts. Like, even though I know how it is, it still rankles’. Those people with only one sibling felt this more keenly. For example, one young woman said she was never really sure what to say if anyone asked her if she had brothers and sisters.

Graham feels like an only child in some respects and misses out on not being able to talk to his…

Age at interview 24

Gender Male

View profile

Eloises brother has learnt to sometimes ask if shes had a good day, but he couldnt deal with…

Age at interview 18

Gender Female

View profile

Anne said she had to play both roles when playing adventures with her brother.

Age at interview 54

Gender Female

View profile

Lucy says she misses out on having an older brother and feels that she is the older sibling.

Age at interview 18

Gender Female

View profile

‘I used to think ‘Why can’t he be like one of my mates?’

The difficulties some people experienced growing up often revolved around particular behaviours by their siblings. Some people reflected on embarrassing situations they had experienced in public places with their siblings. For example, one brother had a pathological hatred of Dora the Explorer which could cause some awkward encounters with children when he was out. A few were destructive and could break people’s possessions which they found upsetting or annoying. A few of the siblings could be aggressive or violent when they were distressed. One person recalled how, when she hugged her brother recently, he ‘bit her neck like a vampire’. She likened living with him to ‘living with a time bomb without a timer’. A few siblings were territorial over space and wouldn’t let anyone else in the living room (see ‘Organising family life‘).

A few felt they hated their sibling sometimes when they were growing up. They felt frustrated or distant from their sibling, though these feelings could cause them to feel guilty.

Ellie can remember hating her brother at times, not because hes autistic, but because he wasnt…

Age at interview 17

Gender Female

View profile

In terms of now, many people were in very different situations with their siblings. Some people were at college or working abroad, and so didn’t see them as often. This suited some people but not others. Others were still living at home with their sibling, and a few older people saw their siblings less frequently, as they were settled in independent supported living.

Anne talks to her brother regularly on the telephone and he sometimes sends her flowers on Mother…

Age at interview 54

Gender Female

View profile

Graham doesnt like the fact that chunks of his brothers life are not known to him, now he works…

Age at interview 24

Gender Male

View profile

Organising family life

The organisation of family life can be complicated when a family member is on the autism spectrum. Different aspects of family life, including routines at...