She was eight when she started packing school lunches—not for herself, but for her younger brothers.
By eleven, she knew how to calm a colicky baby, boil rice without burning it, and sense her mother's mood from the sound of her footsteps. At thirteen, she could defuse her father's temper before it exploded, walk her siblings to school, and still manage to finish her homework by candlelight.
She wasn't a prodigy.
She was just the eldest daughter.
And that meant her childhood didn't belong to her.
In households around the world—South Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, parts of Africa and the American South—the firstborn girl is rarely “just a child.” She is a deputy parent. A shadow mother. A quiet manager of chaos.
When we romanticize it, we call it maturity. When we overlook it, we call it normal.
But here's what I noticed: the maturity comes at a cost. These girls grow up fast, and often alone. They learn not to cry because no one has time to soothe them. They carry expectations that are too heavy for their small shoulders, yet are praised for not buckling.
My friend Ayesha once said, "I didn't learn to play. I learned to serve."
Invisible labor wears pretty smiles
In most families, the help is unspoken.
Firstborn daughters are the ones who notice when milk runs low. They wash dishes while their brothers watch TV. They remember birthdays. They iron school uniforms. They help Mom navigate bureaucracy, translate at the bank, call the doctor, mediate sibling fights, and make sure no one forgets to call Grandma.
But they don't complain. Because complaint is seen as weakness. Or worse—disobedience.
Even now, I see it in grown women who say “yes” too quickly. Who answers family calls while on work calls. Who say they're “fine” when they're clearly exhausted. The ones who become therapists, teachers, nurses—not just professionally, but personally.
They are reliable. Empathetic. Self-sacrificing.
But at what cost?
Maybe she needed mothering too
Some women break the cycle. They set boundaries, go to therapy, marry gentle people, or choose not to raise kids at all.
But many still carry the wound of an unlived childhood.
A daughter who was told, “You're the strong one” learns to suppress her needs. A girl who hears “You're like a second mom to her” might never learn what it feels like to be cared for. That's not strength. That's an emotional inheritance no one asked for.
And if she ever breaks down? People are shocked. “But you always have it all together.”
Of course she does. Until she doesn't.
Let her rest. Let her play. Let her be
If you're a parent, check in on your eldest daughter. If you're a sibling, ask her what she needs. And if you are that daughter—pause.
You deserved more.
Not more praise. More freedom.
No more responsibility. More room to breathe.
Because being the oldest shouldn't mean being forgotten.

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