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.
You are really DENSE. The closest sibling doesn’t get to CHOOSE. You get dumped on. If Deadbeat sibling can go to Europe, Disney, Beach weeks etc. then you can come more than once every four years to visit a parent who wasn’t abusive and was supportive to you. If not then don’t expect to be part of the extended family.
No one is talking about if a sibling has other pressing issues like specials needs child, low income and can’t afford it, parent was abusive, etc. Or even if the sibling who is distant if they are at least trying to do things like handle finances, order things online, or even just be be supportive. This is about deadbeat siblings who completely bow out, never visit, and let others pick up the slack. They are selfish and deserve to be shunned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So complicated. Since you sound like the peacemaker, why do you think bare min sibling is not pitching in? Has anyone asked bare min sib to do X? Maybe they need a specific task. Does helper sib think bare min sibling should just “know” what needs to be done?
The unhelpful sibling never offers to do anything even when it’s obvious the other siblings need help.
When asked directly to do something, they typically have an excuse (too busy with kids soccer/birthday parties, taking kids to/from school, work travel, vacations, their own family’s medical appointments, etc.).
The other siblings have the same busy family schedules, but we take turns and enlist the help of our spouses and sometimes teenagers to cover with family stuff so we can handle the caregiving.
The most helpful sibling is convinced the unhelpful one is just selfish. They only see the impact of caregiving on themselves and their own schedule and cannot recognize the sacrifices the rest of us are making to help our parent and each other.
Re: cutting them out - It has more to do with logistics and planning. While we’ve typically done the big family holidays at a sibling’s house, now the helpful one has suggested moving Christmas to their vacation home or a vacation destination. The elderly parent will be there (since the helpful one is the primary caregiver). The other helpful siblings will be invited, but the unhelpful one won’t…unless I can broker peace.
It sounds like the caregiving is too much work for your extended family to handle. Do you/your "helpful" sibling" really expect the other sibling's family to miss out on kids activities, skip their own medical appointments, etc.?
Groceries, medications and other goods can be delivered/shipped to the facility. But, if a parent needs that much help they need an aid or nursing home. This poster could help with the kids activities so that they can go visit. Lots of options here.
It also assumes the parents were good to the child and helped the child when they could with their kids... My mom is so warm and kind to my sibling but both are horrible to me. I'm sure they bitterly complain but refuse to listen to why I feel the way I do and change their behavior.
Wait a sec? Are you really so dense you think the helpful sibling when they finally get a break from having to deal up the parents are expected to drive the deadbeat siblings kids instead of spending time with her own kids? What crazy world do you live in? You have no idea even being in an assisted living place how much help you still have to provide. And who is going to be paying that aide, arranging for the hours etc. A magic fairy? You are so incredibly selfish and clueless.
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.
Anonymous wrote:All of you saying "I'm glad I'm not being judged for not doing more when [I have special circumstances not in play in OP's case/I am doing a lot in a way that fills necessary gaps]" -- you can calm down. The shoe doesn't fit. You need not point out that the shoe doesn't fit. No one is accusing you of anything.
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.
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.
Anonymous wrote:I think the most common thing is that one sibling does 95% and the other does 5%, under duress.
That’s what I have observed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So complicated. Since you sound like the peacemaker, why do you think bare min sibling is not pitching in? Has anyone asked bare min sib to do X? Maybe they need a specific task. Does helper sib think bare min sibling should just “know” what needs to be done?
The unhelpful sibling never offers to do anything even when it’s obvious the other siblings need help.
When asked directly to do something, they typically have an excuse (too busy with kids soccer/birthday parties, taking kids to/from school, work travel, vacations, their own family’s medical appointments, etc.).
The other siblings have the same busy family schedules, but we take turns and enlist the help of our spouses and sometimes teenagers to cover with family stuff so we can handle the caregiving.
The most helpful sibling is convinced the unhelpful one is just selfish. They only see the impact of caregiving on themselves and their own schedule and cannot recognize the sacrifices the rest of us are making to help our parent and each other.
Re: cutting them out - It has more to do with logistics and planning. While we’ve typically done the big family holidays at a sibling’s house, now the helpful one has suggested moving Christmas to their vacation home or a vacation destination. The elderly parent will be there (since the helpful one is the primary caregiver). The other helpful siblings will be invited, but the unhelpful one won’t…unless I can broker peace.
It sounds like the caregiving is too much work for your extended family to handle. Do you/your "helpful" sibling" really expect the other sibling's family to miss out on kids activities, skip their own medical appointments, etc.?
Groceries, medications and other goods can be delivered/shipped to the facility. But, if a parent needs that much help they need an aid or nursing home. This poster could help with the kids activities so that they can go visit. Lots of options here.
It also assumes the parents were good to the child and helped the child when they could with their kids... My mom is so warm and kind to my sibling but both are horrible to me. I'm sure they bitterly complain but refuse to listen to why I feel the way I do and change their behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So complicated. Since you sound like the peacemaker, why do you think bare min sibling is not pitching in? Has anyone asked bare min sib to do X? Maybe they need a specific task. Does helper sib think bare min sibling should just “know” what needs to be done?
The unhelpful sibling never offers to do anything even when it’s obvious the other siblings need help.
When asked directly to do something, they typically have an excuse (too busy with kids soccer/birthday parties, taking kids to/from school, work travel, vacations, their own family’s medical appointments, etc.).
The other siblings have the same busy family schedules, but we take turns and enlist the help of our spouses and sometimes teenagers to cover with family stuff so we can handle the caregiving.
The most helpful sibling is convinced the unhelpful one is just selfish. They only see the impact of caregiving on themselves and their own schedule and cannot recognize the sacrifices the rest of us are making to help our parent and each other.
Re: cutting them out - It has more to do with logistics and planning. While we’ve typically done the big family holidays at a sibling’s house, now the helpful one has suggested moving Christmas to their vacation home or a vacation destination. The elderly parent will be there (since the helpful one is the primary caregiver). The other helpful siblings will be invited, but the unhelpful one won’t…unless I can broker peace.
It sounds like the caregiving is too much work for your extended family to handle. Do you/your "helpful" sibling" really expect the other sibling's family to miss out on kids activities, skip their own medical appointments, etc.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So complicated. Since you sound like the peacemaker, why do you think bare min sibling is not pitching in? Has anyone asked bare min sib to do X? Maybe they need a specific task. Does helper sib think bare min sibling should just “know” what needs to be done?
The unhelpful sibling never offers to do anything even when it’s obvious the other siblings need help.
When asked directly to do something, they typically have an excuse (too busy with kids soccer/birthday parties, taking kids to/from school, work travel, vacations, their own family’s medical appointments, etc.).
The other siblings have the same busy family schedules, but we take turns and enlist the help of our spouses and sometimes teenagers to cover with family stuff so we can handle the caregiving.
The most helpful sibling is convinced the unhelpful one is just selfish. They only see the impact of caregiving on themselves and their own schedule and cannot recognize the sacrifices the rest of us are making to help our parent and each other.
Re: cutting them out - It has more to do with logistics and planning. While we’ve typically done the big family holidays at a sibling’s house, now the helpful one has suggested moving Christmas to their vacation home or a vacation destination. The elderly parent will be there (since the helpful one is the primary caregiver). The other helpful siblings will be invited, but the unhelpful one won’t…unless I can broker peace.
It sounds like the caregiving is too much work for your extended family to handle. Do you/your "helpful" sibling" really expect the other sibling's family to miss out on kids activities, skip their own medical appointments, etc.?
Of course not.
But the unhelpful sibling has a spouse.
There’s no reason for any of us to miss everything. When everyone takes turns, everyone wins.
The point is this one sibling always has an excuse and never helps.
If our parent has weekly pt plus other random appointments, everyone should volunteer to take a turn…or step up and cover something else.
I mean, everyone grocery shops, right? Why can’t they pick up the groceries once in a while? Why can’t they offer to prepare some meals?
The big thing is respite care. Why not offer to cover a week or weekend?
Because they don't want to. And they don't have to.
None of you do.
And the line about how your unhelpful sibling "has a spouse" is just garbage. They are prioritizing their nuclear family and that is their prerogative.
?
All siblings have a spouse and kids. All but one have figured out how to pitch in and help by adjusting their schedule or relying on their spouse to handle the soccer practice while they spend one evening having dinner with their elderly parent (or whatever).
It’s not like anyone has been asked to cover care 24/7 for weeks on end. Our expectations are really low at this point.
Prioritizing the nuclear family? Whatever. All of us have a family. And this sibling is basically driving us away. I think they will regret it when everyone is celebrating family events and holidays, vacationing together, etc. and they aren’t included. Their kids will suffer.