+1. In the process of taking in two minor children of a relative. Whoever is the primary insured will need to be designated the child's (children's) guardian by the court. |
I wonder what the kids would prefer. |
OP, so tough but stand your ground. Please be explicit to the effect of "I have my own tenuous hold on my finances and creating a floor for my family - this addition would probably rip that out from under us." Hugs to you. |
Unless the relatives was someone they actually saw with some frequency, the strangers are probably not much different in a child's mind. My kids would consider a relative they saw once a year or less to be the same as a stranger. |
I had a different experience with this. I took in one of my sister's minor children and was able to put her on my insurance by stating that I was the family member primarily responsible for her care and that she lived with me. No one ever required a court appointed designation. |
Glad to hear you were successful. DH checked with his HR department and was told he had to be designated the children's guardian. |
How old are your kids? |
Plus 1 |
Your mom should step up. Don't be strong armed into anything. |
I am the OP. i know i cannot take them in. The pressure from my mother that i should be doing more to help them has led me to question myself and i just feel so rotten about this. can't help feeling guilty in a weird way i don't really understand. |
I could realistically take in 2-3 of my siblings' children on a temporary basis and see to it that they're cared for and loved, but I'd need to either have financial support from my sibling (or if my parents decided to foot the bill) or have guardianship signed over the the duration of the stay so that I can make use of the childcare subsidy available to me through my employer. ANd I know not all families are in the position, but in mine, if that sort of situation arose, probably all the siblings would pitch in a bit - some to cover groceries, some to cover summer camp, while the other sibling took on the day to day duties of childcare. So if my brother got sick, his wife left him or wasn't able to manage, and my parents weren't in a position to care for the kids, then I could take them until he recovers and I think overall, that would be less traumatic for the kids, so we'd do our best to make it work. But if one of my siblings wasn't holding down a job and was well and capable, like with OP's brother, I can't imagine me housing the kids would be the best kind of help. My parents would probably take the grandkids in, but I'm not sure how long my dad would give before kicking the adult out for refusing to be responsible. We were always told that you can work and have support or you can be out on your own, but you don't get to just be an adult living off mom & dad's sofa. |
Even if you were perfectly healthy, taking on a toddler is a lot of work. If you don't have a lot of space and money to spare, it could make a huge impact on your life! People are far too quick to judge. |
You have already determined that you can't take them in (and rightly so) and you should be firm about it. Stop letting your mother "guilt" you into to helping your brother. If anything, you could probably use some help yourself. Your brother has been enabled by your mom and other family members and he is expecting them to provide financial rescue once again. Yes, it is a distressing situation but you are going to be in distress yourself if you you try to carry him when your priority should be your own family. Be prepared to distance yourself from your enabling mom--she is going to bring out her claws on this one. State your position with no expectation of your mother's approval. And then don't engage her any further about it. It is unrealistic to think that you can say no and still have your mother's support. Her support is going to your brother as usual. ![]() |
Why do I keep seeing so many disfunctional relationships between mothers and sons? It's everywhere! It's the mothers crippling their son's ability to grow up and function. Why?? |
Your mother is feeling guilty that SHE is not helping and is obeying her husband about not helping. You shouldn't feel guilty, and if you need to be brutally blunt with your mother, so be it. Let her know you are not the solution, that your brother needs to get a real job that meets his family's needs better, and that you just cannot give up your own source of income or sacrifice your family's precarious stability because your brother can't get/keep a full-time job. You will NOT sacrifice your own kids and put your whole family into a downward-spiral situation. It's not on you to suddenly be looking after all those kids (plus your brother) for an indeterminate and possibly lengthy amount of time. Give her push-back on her own situation of not being willing to force the issue with her husband. After all, SHE is your brother's MOM; SHE should be taking the lead on helping. |