Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's your sibling. You can say something and be direct, because even if they get all huffy and upset, it will blow over eventually. It's definitely worth trying, because this is really bad for the kid.
Narcissists never let things blow over
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’ve been through years of infertility and now have to transition into this new life. I have a ton of empathy for them. It sounds like you are coming from a place of judgment. Therefore, I wouldn’t say anything because it’s not coming from the right place.
Protecting a child's privacy is not coming from the right place?
Who should have more empathy, the child or the self congratulatory white savior complex parents?
Anonymous wrote:They’ve been through years of infertility and now have to transition into this new life. I have a ton of empathy for them. It sounds like you are coming from a place of judgment. Therefore, I wouldn’t say anything because it’s not coming from the right place.
Anonymous wrote:I have a good friend who adopted a disabled child from an orphanage in an Eastern European country and posts ad nausea on instagram photos, videos and testimonials of all the medical interventions and mental health therapies this poor kid is undergoing. For years. zero privacy.
I think what my friend has done is incredibly noble, but I am extremely uncomfortable with the public insta posting about very private and personal struggles this kid is experiencing. I think my friend’s heart is in the right place but as a disabled person myself I would not want all of my private and intimate moments (including being in pain and despair) plastered all over the internet.
Anonymous wrote:It's your sibling. You can say something and be direct, because even if they get all huffy and upset, it will blow over eventually. It's definitely worth trying, because this is really bad for the kid.
Anonymous wrote:My sibling adopted a drug-exposed 2.5-year-old little boy from foster care last year after many years of infertility.
I realize a child with his background and neglect comes with challenges. However, my sibling and spouse document all of it on social media, mainly in how they saved the boy and how much better he has it. Every new toy, vacation, and family outing is about how he wouldn’t have this or that if we didn’t save him from his horrible biological family.
This is just a rant but it feels so wrong to me, especially as their son gets older and can read their posts or internalize their commentary. I want to say something. Would that be wrong? It feels almost narcissistic to constantly post and talk about this.