Anonymous wrote:My mom isn’t able to work, she hasn’t been working for years so it’s a struggle for my dad to support both of them financially on top of her medical bills. My brother used to pay a lot of their utilities prior to marriage when he wasn’t deployed overseas and lived with them.
I just feel like he got married and everything he helped our parents with went to the wayside and he doesn’t even try anymore.
Anonymous wrote:My mom isn’t able to work, she hasn’t been working for years so it’s a struggle for my dad to support both of them financially on top of her medical bills. My brother used to pay a lot of their utilities prior to marriage when he wasn’t deployed overseas and lived with them.
I just feel like he got married and everything he helped our parents with went to the wayside and he doesn’t even try anymore.
(I'm not like OP's brother, but I'm sure my sister resents me a bit, and would resent if my bro's wife sent a bouquet that my parents fawned over.)
Anonymous wrote:Well you help your mom and she watches your younger child, right? Your brother and SIL are friendly and independent. I can't see any fault here.
Anonymous wrote:You should ask your brother to help out. That's on him, not your SIL. If he can't contribute financially anymore, then ask him to share the caretaking load.
Anonymous wrote:First of all, this is all on your brother. What has *he* done? Talk with *him* about sharing the load.
What SIL did was a nice gesture, and it's not her responsibility to do the care-taking.
Nor should you be mad that he isn't supporting your parents financially anymore--different goals and priorities come with marriage, planning for house, kids all that. It was nice that he did that for a time--assuming it would go on forever, particularly when he was single while doing it, was short-sighted.