| Honestly if you are confident and secure in your choices, you should ignore your sister…unless she is hitting a nerve. It’s no different from the judgy sister (or other moms) going on and on about making organic baby food, wood toys, no day care etc… Who cares! Just say, yes everything in life has trade offs and move on. |
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To "must be nice" say "yeah, it is nice." Take her snark at face value.
To "I would never..." say "different strokes for different folks" or "People are different" or whatever. If it's starting to bother you AND you have a close relationship with your sister, in response to an "I would never" you could try a "that's a hurtful thing to say" and then just let it hang there. |
| I find snarky people who are emotionally immature can dish it but they can't take it. You could try calling her out and asking her why she would say that, but my guess is she will just be defensive. We just change the subject, pretend we are deaf to those comments and decrease the time with the person. It's usually not worth engaging with that sort of thing. Take the high road and keep your boundaries. |
| Ask your sister directly why she is making those snarky comments. You both have different things that make you happy but she should be kind and so should you. |
You sound like a really great friend. |
I’m pretty certain about my choice to work and frankly none of my mom friends question it either. The trade off is not always work 80 hrs/wk vs SAH. And now that my kids are late ES/MS, I definitely don’t regret it. |
Given the tone of some of OP’s responses, I’m kind of doubting her innocence in all of this. She may very well be saying passive aggressive incendiary things to her sister while OP tells herself that she has THE. BEST. PLAN. EVER. This probably isn’t WOH/SAH, but a long, slow brew provocative relationship. I’m willing to bet these two exchange subtle digs not infrequently. |
Umm that is an extreme overreaction to “must be nice” I say this kindly, but are you okay OP? |
So you’d rather miss out on your kid’s childhoods so you can be free to live your life in retirement without them as they will be entering college and living their own life by the time you are 50? - Sister’s rebuttal FWIW, DH and I are in the same position versus family members and we just ignore and continue on with our lives. |
IMO, I haven't met a family with 2 sisters without drama and I'm old. I grew up with 3 brothers, no sisters and we had zero drama. With sisters, it's always who is the prettier one, who married better, who is thinner etc. |
You guys are ridiculous. You’re turning this into a strawman argument where the only options are working long hours or being a SAHM. If you read the thread OP AND her sister are both working moms at each other’s throats over the “right” amount of hours. This fight is never ending. Note OP is judging her sister for having to WORK until she’s 65 instead of retiring at 50 and working long hours like OP is doing. Please stop turning this into a SAHM vs. WOHM debate. |
NP. JFC, replies like the one above will only fuel her fire and make her double down on the comments. Sister WANTS an upset or heated reaction from OP so sister can turn and say, "See?! I got to her!" Why on Earth give her that kind of attention? Snarking back at her is still a form of attention, and that is exactly what sister wants. OP, of course she's jealous on one level, and on another, feels superior to you as well. The two things can coexist as a pretty toxic stew. She's taking the low road of making comments. Why not take the high road and not meet snark with snark? Next time she says, for instance, "I'd never spend all those hours away from my kids working, just to afford better clothes" (or whatever), you stop whatever you are doing, turn to her, look her full in the face and say very calmly, "Why would you say that?" In a very neutral tone. Then keep looking at her and WAIT to show you actually expect a reply. Do this every time. "Why would you say that?" and then silently, clearly waiting for her to reply. No snark. I'd wager she will splutter and hem and haw and say, "Uh, uh, I really meant...." etc. Or she'll just shut the hell up. "Why would you say that?" "What do you mean exactly?" "I'm sorry you feel that way," (A statement, but still, look right at her and wait....) Anything that is bland and comes across as a real question, like you just don't see her problem. Her problem of course is her need to bash you for your choices. So turn it onto her to have to explain her comments. Do not expect her actually to explain them, OP, and please, don't actually engage her in a discussion becuase it's useless; but the act of halting her in her tracks with a cool, eye-to-eye "Why would you say that?" can really shut people like her up. Unless she is super argumentative, she'll get flustered and go away, or change the topic. Be sure to do this every single time (tiresome as that is for you) and eventually she may stop. You will appear to be the sensible one, and unflappable. And it denies her your anger or upset--which she would love to see. This approach is as immediately satisfying as snarking back at her, but it absolutely can work if applied repeatedly. I know from experience. And you can feel you are not lowering yourself to her level. |
| You both sound annoying. |
| Why snark? Can you just have an honest conversation about it all? |
This is so insightful and I think really nails it. Maybe really OP and her sister both have the same negative trait, which is a level of arrogance about their own choices and a tendency to judge others who don't do exactly what they do. They made different choices but have the same personality, which is to believe they are right and anyone who is different is wrong. Until OP or her sisters is willing to admit that no has 100% figured out parenting, or life, and that each of them have made choices with both upsides and downsides, they are always going to be needlessly competitive about this. You have to give to get. OP's sister sounds rude as hell, but I don't know. If I had a sister who believed I was stupid for making the life choices I'd made, I also might make snide comments about being home with my kids in the evening or having more flexibility or whatever. It is really miserable to be close to someone who thinks you've messed up your life, that the good things about your life are not actually that good, and that the bad things about your life are all your fault. That sounds awful. |