Anonymous wrote:I think it's important to maintain relationships with family. It's grounding. It's the people that knew you since you were born, and who will know you when you are old. Friends will often come in and out of your life, siblings will always be there. In fact, since my parents will probably die decades before me, and since my wife and I did not meet until our 20s, my sister will know me the longest of anyone on earth.
I love my sister but we are not super besties. We usually text once every two weeks or so. We do quick Alexa video calls every month or two. We see each other twice a year or so. (She lives two hours away, so it's not that hard. Would be more except she is unfortunately estranged with our parents, long story, so I split holidays.)
So I mean yeah we have our own lives most of the time, and then connect when we can and make it a priority to do so. But polite indifference? That's just so... sad. What a bleak way to go through life.
Anonymous wrote:You have to want a relationship with anyone for it to even be an option. I have 3 sisters. We each want to be close, and we each put effort into getting together, talking, staying connected. And we each have very distinctive and different personalities.
Effort, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Same. My brother and I are 22 months apart and have little in common. He's an arborist; I'm a corporate lawyer. I like cities; he likes the outdoors. He's non-confrontational; I'm happy to argue. He lives on the west coast; I live on the east coast. We're polite and reasonably friendly, but we both hate talking on the phone and we see each other once a year (pre-COVID). I am not sure what my parents could have done to resolve the fundamental issue, which is that we don't share interests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same. My brother and I are 22 months apart and have little in common. He's an arborist; I'm a corporate lawyer. I like cities; he likes the outdoors. He's non-confrontational; I'm happy to argue. He lives on the west coast; I live on the east coast. We're polite and reasonably friendly, but we both hate talking on the phone and we see each other once a year (pre-COVID). I am not sure what my parents could have done to resolve the fundamental issue, which is that we don't share interests.
My brother lives on 100 acres in rural Maine. He manages a home for adults with disabilities. He doesn’t like confrontation. I live here, work for FAANG, and am happy to argue. We don’t share many interests. We talk a few times a week, make sure to visit each other, and our kids are very close. I consider him one of my best friends. Not sure having common interests drives a sibling relationship.
I feel like it would help! We visit my brother's city once a year (though 2019 was the last time probably until 2022 because my kids are too young to be vaccinated). He has never visited us (he also has three kids). As I said, neither of us likes to talk on the phone. When we do see each other, without common interests or any common frames of reference, there isn't a lot to talk about other than the kids. I'm curious about what drives sibling relationships that's different from what drives friend relationships, because some people seem to bridge that gap and have a close relationship with a sibling they likely wouldn't be friends with if they weren't related, and others don't. What do you talk about multiple times a week if you don't share many interests?