Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you not allowed to enjoy your successes, just because his seem larger? That’s such distorted thinking, and it’s THAT you are a victim of, not your brother’s behavior. This is something to work through in therapy.
Every who hears about his successes - friends, family, coworkers, whoever - invariably respond with "Wow, what happened to you?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, I'm cracking up at " aspirational luxury handbag" too much to respond properly.
That's an actual descriptor.
Anonymous wrote:Huh. I'm not seeing most of those as one uppers.
I think finding a cheaper private school you are happy with is a good thing!
I think going to a normal college and then OCS is perfectly fine. If you enlisted first, even more impressive. I don't see Annapolis as more impressive.
I think flashy handbags and whatever you are saying he did with his car are ostentatious.
I don't see why being an airline pliot is all that, unless you are unemployed and living in your parents' basement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you not allowed to enjoy your successes, just because his seem larger? That’s such distorted thinking, and it’s THAT you are a victim of, not your brother’s behavior. This is something to work through in therapy.
Every who hears about his successes - friends, family, coworkers, whoever - invariably respond with "Wow, what happened to you?"
Anonymous wrote:He's just a copy of you, albeit a better version.
You are always the OG. You paved a path for him to follow. There is something special about that.
Anonymous wrote:How are you not allowed to enjoy your successes, just because his seem larger? That’s such distorted thinking, and it’s THAT you are a victim of, not your brother’s behavior. This is something to work through in therapy.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds crazy, I know, but I feel like such a failure.
1. I graduate Navy OCS, he graduates from Annapolis 5 years later, having never mentioned the military until I did.
2. I serve four years, he retires an O-6.
3. I learn to fly, he becomes an airline pilot as his second career.
4. I buy a vehicle, he buys the exact same one four trim levels higher (this happened twice).
5. I send my kids to a private school, he finds a more prestigious one that costs twice as much.
6. I bring an aspirational luxury handbag to Thanksgiving, his wife shows up at Christmas with the same brand, twice as big.
I know I'm just jealous, but I also feel like I've never been allowed to celebrate my successes, because here he comes a year or five later blowing them out of the water. Is this something therapy can help with?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, I'm cracking up at " aspirational luxury handbag" too much to respond properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with your brother doing “better” than you? There’s no rule that says younger siblings have to be no better or have to be worse than the oldest.
You’re not “a failure” when he does better. That’s a rather extreme way to talk about yourself. His successes don’t diminish any of yours. This is all about your competitive personality and how you think. Work on changing your thoughts; be happy for your brother and his family. Therapy can help you with that.
It’s good for you and the whole extended family when he does well, too. He could be asking you for money for his rent and bills regularly —and his wife’s designer bag, and his kids’ tuition — that he never can repay. Would you prefer a deadbeat brother?
My family believes differently.
Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with your brother doing “better” than you? There’s no rule that says younger siblings have to be no better or have to be worse than the oldest.
You’re not “a failure” when he does better. That’s a rather extreme way to talk about yourself. His successes don’t diminish any of yours. This is all about your competitive personality and how you think. Work on changing your thoughts; be happy for your brother and his family. Therapy can help you with that.
It’s good for you and the whole extended family when he does well, too. He could be asking you for money for his rent and bills regularly —and his wife’s designer bag, and his kids’ tuition — that he never can repay. Would you prefer a deadbeat brother?