Anonymous wrote:OP, I have three full siblings and a similar family dynamic. When I turned 18 my parents told me I was an adult and no longer would receive Christmas presents because they had to save resources for my younger siblings. I'd come home for Christmas from college and watch my siblings open iPhones, laptops and dSLRs while I received nothing. I'd purchase presents for each of them from my minimum wage job earnings. They got me nothing. It turns out that the rule only applied to me and my parents didn't cut any of my other siblings off at 18, just me. My siblings are in their late 30s and still get nice presents from my parents.
It's still like that. I treat my parents AND siblings when we go out to eat. My siblings are treated by my parents if they do something without me. Why? I don't know. My parents have always hated spending money on me. I've been an obligation my whole life, while they lavish my siblings.
If I raise an issue I'm called greedy. My options are to make peace with it or cut ties with my family. They aren't going to change, but it hurts. Over and over again it hurts.
Anonymous wrote:My husband’s family is sort of like this. His two brothers are sort of failure to launch and his parents pay for tons of stuff for them. It just doesn’t bother my hsuband at all. It bugged me initially, but I’ve let go of it since it isn’t my family. I actually think my husband’s ability to let this go is a good thing. The reality is that the youngest brother recently stepped up and did a ton of care for their father in the last few years of his life. It all sort of evens out in the end — at least for us.
However I also know if it was my family, I would not be able to let this go. I’m not as zen as my husband. But you won’t solve it. You just have to decide how big a deal this really all is and if it is worth damaging relationships over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a choice to say, “I love spending time with you all, but I can’t afford the weekly dinners. I need to cut back to twice a month.”
Let them give their guilt trip or whatever. That’s fine. Again, you have a choice.
What you have no control over is how your dad & stepmother spend their money. You can whine and complain all about it. But none of that will change anything. Again, it’s your choice about how you want to spend your time and money. You’re not a victim here. When you complain and do nothing about it, you’re being a victim. Stop.
When you pretend that you’re one happy family and don’t call out blatant unequal treatment for fear of rocking the boat you’re also being a victim.
Anonymous wrote:You have a choice to say, “I love spending time with you all, but I can’t afford the weekly dinners. I need to cut back to twice a month.”
Let them give their guilt trip or whatever. That’s fine. Again, you have a choice.
What you have no control over is how your dad & stepmother spend their money. You can whine and complain all about it. But none of that will change anything. Again, it’s your choice about how you want to spend your time and money. You’re not a victim here. When you complain and do nothing about it, you’re being a victim. Stop.
Anonymous wrote:Well they *are* young and money *is* tighter for them.
One of the great prides of my life is being able to help out my much younger siblings. Lucky you that you don’t even have to pay for them—dad is getting the check.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, and while some people on here will tell you to suck it up, most experts will tell you it is a recipe for dysfunction. I would start only doing things with them that don't cost anything or are not very expensive. Suggest meeting for coffee or dessert instead or meeting up for a hike. If they ask why you never go to dinner, just say you are saving. If they guilt trip you, that is on them for treating you differently.
Stop hosting if it costs too much or host in an inexpensive way. Offer brunch, not lunch or dinner.