Anonymous wrote:Every rational person will agree with me. You can read your response yourself: now it's a problem when the "unhelpful" sibling stops by to see their mom unannounced?! You and the other sibling are simply some control freaks. Nobody needs to make an agreement with you to see their mom. If pharmacy pickup is a problem, do it through Amazon delivery. You literally make up problems. Your sibling is allowed to see their mom without your approval.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Wow. Just wow.
Yep. I cannot stand this:
"I’m so glad I’m not a jerk. I’m so glad at least most of my siblings are helpful. I’m so glad I’m modeling decent caregiving behavior for my own kids (who enjoy visiting their grandmother)."
Your mom is (1) unable to leave her house independently (needs help getting groceries, getting to a doctor, hair salon) (2) has cognitive decline (is forgetful) (3) needs someone to watch if she eats properly. These are just a few issues that you said your mom has. Not sure what are you waiting for, for her to set her house on fire?
Anonymous wrote:
Wow. Just wow.
Anonymous wrote:I already said, I don't know your sibling's schedule, there is no law how often one has to visit. If he wanted to come more often, he would. I don't know for example if your mom helped him out with childrearing or anything at all and if he feels indebted. If he is a jerk as you say, I'm afraid that's on your mom's parenting. Again, as you say, I guess she didn't model caregiving behavior herself perhaps. But I agree, thanks to medical advancement, the elderly live long and therefore once they're not independent any more, they should not be living alone. So you need to figure out the next steps. Whether it's having her live with one of you or hire help. You'll not avoid throwing money at it once one is helpless to such extent that they are unable to do basic daily tasks, unless you intend to give up your own life. Perhaps your sibling has figured this all out, because you sure haven't, and that's all there is to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, can you talk to the other sibling? They might think the Helpful Sibling is doing too much, taking on too much, stepped in when it wasn't 100% needed. Some siblings want to step in more than others at early stages.
Yes, everyone has talked with the unhelpful sibling—as a group, and individually.
Nobody stepped in too early/when help wasn’t needed.
The most helpful sibling isn’t controlling or doing anything that isn’t necessary.
I guess we are just stumped as to how the unhelpful sibling can justify leaving the work to the rest of us. I’m trying to get them involved and to realize they might be cut out from the family. At some point I won’t be able to fix things for the unhelpful one. I’m sad that the kids/cousins will be impacted by this.
If you don’t want to do the work, then don’t. No one is forcing you to. Threatening to “cut them from the family” just makes you a bunch of bullies.
This is really impossible to do unless you are completely heartless. I am the closest sibling and when I get called by the assisted living our mother called and is in the ER it’s tough to ignore. It’s also tough to ignore when the old person can’t see because they broke their glasses and need to go to the optometrist, they need to update hearing aids, pharmacy calls about medication, when it’s their birthday and they want you to visit,, etc.
One sibling does nothing. He lives an hour plane ride away and has not visited once in 4 years. He doesn’t bring his tween aged kids to visit either. He doesn’t help out in any way. He has the money to fly in the morning rent a car visit his mother and fly home that night. I am so resentful that I no longer wish to have any relationship with him, his wife or kids. It is completely unfair that I got stuck with our mother when I was never close to her. He used to tell her she could live with him. She has Alzheimer’s and now his kids will never know their grandmother. Meanwhile my teens and husband pick up the slack.
So what are you talking about that people like me are bullies? People who let a sibling do all the work are the selfish a-holes.
He lives an hour by plane and has a wife and kids. It is unreasonable to expect him to do all this "drop everything and go" attending to your mother that you CHOOSE to do.
Yes, you are a bully. You are resentful and now you bully your husband and kids into "picking up the slack." This is on you.
Interested what you chose to put in bold. The poster isn't asking her brother to drop everything at a moment's notice. She's asking him to find one day in four years when he could visit. He hasn't bothered, despite his big talk years ago. So yeah, he's a glass bowl, and the poster isn't a bully for noticing.
To the original question: the sibling who does everything is under no obligation to the sibling who does nothing, but overcontributing sibling isn't doing all that work for the sibling's benefit -- she's doing it for their parents. So if the parents want idle kid at Christmas, Do Everything needs to include them to some degree, but not in a way that makes more work for her. "We're having Christmas at Rehoboth, but we won't be able to put you up. Hotels and rentals should be pretty cheap, and I know Mom and Dad would love to have us all togethe for the holidays."
Anonymous wrote:I already said, I don't know your sibling's schedule, there is no law how often one has to visit. If he wanted to come more often, he would. I don't know for example if your mom helped him out with childrearing or anything at all and if he feels indebted. If he is a jerk as you say, I'm afraid that's on your mom's parenting. Again, as you say, I guess she didn't model caregiving behavior herself perhaps. But I agree, thanks to medical advancement, the elderly live long and therefore once they're not independent any more, they should not be living alone. So you need to figure out the next steps. Whether it's having her live with one of you or hire help. You'll not avoid throwing money at it once one is helpless to such extent that they are unable to do basic daily tasks, unless you intend to give up your own life. Perhaps your sibling has figured this all out, because you sure haven't, and that's all there is to it.