Demographic trends tend to play out in the timelines of multiple generations. Declining birth rates, increased life spans and widespread lifestyle changes can all have a dramatic impact on not only
what our families look like, but also how we connect with them. And because families are the nucleus of our world, changes in families mean fundamental changes in us: who we are, what we believe, and
how we connect with our world.
I have previously written about one such trend: a surplus of grandparents. The ratio of grandparents to grandchildren has never been higher than it is right
now, thanks to increased life expectancy and a declining birth rate. It’s closing in on 1:1, meaning for every child, there is one unique grandparent. As a grandparent, I have to believe this is
a good thing.
But another demographic trend is playing out that may not be as positive for our family structure. While the grandparent market is booming, our supply of cousins is dwindling.
And, as I’ll explain shortly, cousins are a good thing for us to have.
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But first, a little demographic math. In the U.S. in 1960, the average number of children per household was 3.62.
This was a spike thanks to the post-WWII baby boom, but it’s relevant because this generation and the one before were the ones that determined the current crop of cousins for people of my
age.
My parents were born in the 1930s. If both of them had three siblings, as was the norm, that would give me six aunts or uncles, all having children during the Baby Boom. And each of them
would have three to four kids. So that would potentially supply 24 first cousins for me.
Now, let’s skip ahead a generation. Since 1970, the average number of children per household in
the U.S. has hovered between 1.5 and 2. If I had been born in 1995, that would mean I only had two aunts or uncles, one from my mother’s side and one from my father’s. And if they each had
2 children, that would drop my first cousin quota down to 4. That’s 20 less first cousins in just one generation!
But what does this lack of first cousins mean in real terms? Cousins
play an interesting sociological and psychological role in our development. Thanks to evolution, we all have something called “kindship altruism.” In the simplest of terms, we are
hardwired to help those with which we share some DNA. Those evolved bonds are strongest with those with whom we share the most DNA. There is a hierarchy of kinship -- topped by our parents and
siblings.
But just one rung down the ladder are our first cousins. And those first cousins can play a critical role in how we get along with the world as we grow up. As journalist Faith Hill
noted in The Atlantic, “Cousin connections can be lovely because they exist in that strange gray area between closeness and distance—because they don’t follow
a strict playbook.”
As Hill said, cousins represent a unique middle ground. We have a lot in common with our cousins, but not too much. Our cousins can come from different
upbringings, can span a wider range of ages than our siblings, can come from different socioeconomic circumstances, can even live in different places. We may see them every day, or once every year or
two.
Yet we’re connected in an important way. Cousins play a critical role in helping us navigate relationships and learning to understand different perspectives. Having many cousins is
like having a big sandbox for our societal development.
If you overlay societal trends on this demographic trend towards fewer first cousins, the shift is even more noticeable. We are a lot
more mobile now than our parents and grandparents were. Families used to generally live close to each other. Now they spread across the country.
Most of us have a handful of cousins whom we
rarely see. At a time when societal connection is more important than ever, I worry that this is one more instance of us losing the skills we need to get along with each other.
From my own
experience, I have found that the relationship between my cousins is vital in negotiating the stewardship of our families as it’s handed off from our parent’s generation to our own. I have
become closer to many cousins as, one by one, our parents are taken from us. Through our cousins we relive cherished memories and regain that common ground of shared experience and ancestry.