Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you guys Italian by chance? I married into a family like this. MIL once said this to DH. You are dead to me. I was horrified. He said this was normal. So if that’s your family, then continue how you have, but after that, I took MiL at her word and kept her at arm’s length.
We're Irish Catholic. This type of behavior is part of the family ethos. The troyble first arose when I quit drinking and started therapy. I could no longer tolerate the dysfunction. We weren't raised well so none of us knows how to relate to each other in a healthy way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. Are you upset because now you cannot communicate with her, because she blocked you; or is it because being blocked is supposed to be taken as an insult?
Being blocked is so trivial. You can block and un block on a whim. It doesn't really actually do anything to you except it prevents you from communicating with her when she prefers you don't.
Why do you feel you should be able to communicate with someone against their will, and why would you want to?
Op here. I am upset because I cannot have a peaceful relationship with my sister. Of course I am hurt and embarassed that she cussed me out and then announced I was dead to her and that she blocked me publicly. I am upset that none of my other siblings, including the one I was defending, reached out to me or responded to her abusive texts. It has been a few days and I feel sad and relieved.
Yes you can. Your entire sibling group is far too enmeshed with each other. You are not owning your part of this dysfunctional relationship. You said none of the other siblings came to your defense. You portray yourself as the hero/victim. I am sure the situation is more nuanced. You are way too reactive and sound like a drama queen.
You are over stimulating your brain with little bleeps and boops on a screen. You are getting endorphin hits like a trained mynah bird pecking for treats in a psychologists experiment.
None of it is real. It's all in your head. Turn off your darn phone for a while and quit it with the mental masturbation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. Are you upset because now you cannot communicate with her, because she blocked you; or is it because being blocked is supposed to be taken as an insult?
Being blocked is so trivial. You can block and un block on a whim. It doesn't really actually do anything to you except it prevents you from communicating with her when she prefers you don't.
Why do you feel you should be able to communicate with someone against their will, and why would you want to?
Op here. I am upset because I cannot have a peaceful relationship with my sister. Of course I am hurt and embarassed that she cussed me out and then announced I was dead to her and that she blocked me publicly. I am upset that none of my other siblings, including the one I was defending, reached out to me or responded to her abusive texts. It has been a few days and I feel sad and relieved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry you are dealing with this.
I know we talk about this ad nauseum on DCUM, but I am a big believer in the "grey rock" approach with, well, let's just say overly dramatic and chaotic people in the family.
Jus don't engage. Go ahead and follow the group text with other siblings as you choose and ignore the fact that for part of it, you are being ignored. If she adds you back in, don't react to that, either -- just carry on as if nothing happened.
You are SUPPOSED to react. You are SUPPOSED to be angry, or hurt, or anything emotional that validates her importance and the drama. Don't engage that. If you want to stay in the group text, that's fine. Just ac as if she is acting perfectly normally and carry on.
Meanwhile, do something nice for yourself, okay? This is exhausting to have to handle, and it often ramps up around the holidays. OP deserves something nice to get through it.
Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry you are dealing with this.
I know we talk about this ad nauseum on DCUM, but I am a big believer in the "grey rock" approach with, well, let's just say overly dramatic and chaotic people in the family.
Jus don't engage. Go ahead and follow the group text with other siblings as you choose and ignore the fact that for part of it, you are being ignored. If she adds you back in, don't react to that, either -- just carry on as if nothing happened.
You are SUPPOSED to react. You are SUPPOSED to be angry, or hurt, or anything emotional that validates her importance and the drama. Don't engage that. If you want to stay in the group text, that's fine. Just ac as if she is acting perfectly normally and carry on.
Meanwhile, do something nice for yourself, okay? This is exhausting to have to handle, and it often ramps up around the holidays. OP deserves something nice to get through it.

Anonymous wrote:Why do you interpret being blocked as an insult? It says nothing about the person who is being blocked at all.
Why be so personally invested in what people you don't get along with do or think of you?
"Oh my God! The person I don't like and never want to talk to again blocked me before I could block her!!!"
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. Are you upset because now you cannot communicate with her, because she blocked you; or is it because being blocked is supposed to be taken as an insult?
Being blocked is so trivial. You can block and un block on a whim. It doesn't really actually do anything to you except it prevents you from communicating with her when she prefers you don't.
Why do you feel you should be able to communicate with someone against their will, and why would you want to?