Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It would be weird if you guys were close as kids and don't speak. But if it's a natural progression of the relationship/personalities, I'd say absent bad feelings, it's fine.
- Someone that talks to her sister and parents nearly ever day.
No
we were 5.5 years apart and never close.
That's you writing that above, right, OP? That's enough of an age spread that, combined with things like being different genders (yeah, it can matter) and, if it applies, having different interests and/or personalities, means you and your brother were somewhat likely candidates for falling out of touch. Before others who say this is not normal come on to protest that they're super-close to a sibling who is much older or younger or who is the opposite gender etc. -- yes, that does happen too. But unless OP and brother had similar interests or their parents actively tried to foster closeness between them, it's not wildly crazy that they might have drifted apart as adults.
OP, consider this: Your age difference was enough that one of you was in the last years of high school when the other was still in elementary. One was off at college (or just out of the family home) when the other was barely starting middle school. No common friend groups, probably, and maybe no activities together except whatever your parents said was "family" activity such as church--?. My brother and I were more than four years apart and kind of like this -- he had totally different interests, is a very different person from me, and was just enough older that we didn't play together as kids; he was off doing his own thing by the time I was old enough to be interested in having a sibling anyway.
Add to that: You're in touch with SIL on FB. Keeping up via social media can -- this is my opinion -- give a kind of false feeling that we're in touch with someone when we really aren't. Your SIL posts about what her whole family, including her husband, your brother, is doing, right? So it may make you feel that you generally know what's up with them even if you haven't seen them or spoken to/e-mailed/texted/phoned/visited them, or him. Then you realize, as you now have, that....you haven't actually kept up with him, you've been following his family's life on FB. Nothing wrong with FB following and SIL telling you any news, but can you see what I mean when I think it can produce a false impression that we're truly in touch?
So I'm saying, please don't waste energy beating yourself up over this, or worrying about whether your own kids will fall out of touch with siblings or with you. Take that energy and re-establish direct contact with your brother. No need for a formal re-introduction or explanation other than, "Hey, I realized it's been a long time since we talked" and take it from there. Ask about your niece, ask about his job, whatever. Keep it light. Things will build. Don't fret over whether it's normal or not or whether folks here online think it's odd; just go with your gut and get in touch with him.