Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like brother took one for the team and worked stressful jobs so he could support your SIL’a (kind of bs) low-paying job. It’s her turn to step up and get a real job or agree to figure out cheaper way to live. Sounds like she was using him and has no interest now that he’s not bringing in the big bucks. She needs to step up. This should be what marriage is about.
Kind of sounds this way to me too.
Anonymous wrote:OP again, SIL has now kicked him out of home. She has lots of family in the area, he doesn't have anyone really besides handful of friends he hasn't known that long (they just moved there 2.5 years ago).
I told him I do not think that is legal if there is no threat to her (she has told me there has been no violence) -- but he says he isn't really sure what options are -- fight it and have her family show up in mass to kick him out? He stayed in hotel last night.
SIL messaged me again today saying she suspects addiction -- bro has asked me 1) not to talk to her and 2) to keep some things in confidence from our parents. Since our parents will ultimately be on the hook for this financial mess, I have shared with them SIL's addiction concerns because if they are accurate, he obviously needs help and i don't want them just cutting checks that turn into blow or opioids or whatever.
If they need/choose to pay for a treatment program, then fine -- but money shouldn't be wasted in short-term.
We found a local outpatient place that will take his insurance but no clue if it is crappy or not. He says he is getting drug-tested now (which will be needed to prove fit parent in any case) and will go to intake for program afterward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like brother took one for the team and worked stressful jobs so he could support your SIL’a (kind of bs) low-paying job. It’s her turn to step up and get a real job or agree to figure out cheaper way to live. Sounds like she was using him and has no interest now that he’s not bringing in the big bucks. She needs to step up. This should be what marriage is about.
Kind of sounds this way to me too.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like brother took one for the team and worked stressful jobs so he could support your SIL’a (kind of bs) low-paying job. It’s her turn to step up and get a real job or agree to figure out cheaper way to live. Sounds like she was using him and has no interest now that he’s not bringing in the big bucks. She needs to step up. This should be what marriage is about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would fly to CA. Ask your brother to schedule an appointment with the doctor so the 3 of you can sit down and talk face to face. Ask to speak with the doctor alone too, if necessary. Forget about his family issues, his mental health should be the focus.
From one of the pro-boundaries PPs, do NOT do this. It establishes a terrible precedent. Moreover, you can't speak to the doctor alone about your adult brother's health issues, in that the doctor won't disclose anything unless your brother signs a disclosure form. You don't even necessarily want him to do that; he's a reasonably functional adult, not someone over whom you have guardianship. If anyone should take him to this appointment, it's his wife.
Hold. Those. Boundaries.
You speak as someone who has never dealt with mental health issues. It is scary and isolating for the patient. Risk of suicide is real. OP’s brother has reached out to her for hell. It is not the time for boundaries. It is time to help him get a diagnosis and meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would fly to CA. Ask your brother to schedule an appointment with the doctor so the 3 of you can sit down and talk face to face. Ask to speak with the doctor alone too, if necessary. Forget about his family issues, his mental health should be the focus.
From one of the pro-boundaries PPs, do NOT do this. It establishes a terrible precedent. Moreover, you can't speak to the doctor alone about your adult brother's health issues, in that the doctor won't disclose anything unless your brother signs a disclosure form. You don't even necessarily want him to do that; he's a reasonably functional adult, not someone over whom you have guardianship. If anyone should take him to this appointment, it's his wife.
Hold. Those. Boundaries.
You speak as someone who has never dealt with mental health issues. It is scary and isolating for the patient. Risk of suicide is real. OP’s brother has reached out to her for hell. It is not the time for boundaries. It is time to help him get a diagnosis and meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would fly to CA. Ask your brother to schedule an appointment with the doctor so the 3 of you can sit down and talk face to face. Ask to speak with the doctor alone too, if necessary. Forget about his family issues, his mental health should be the focus.
From one of the pro-boundaries PPs, do NOT do this. It establishes a terrible precedent. Moreover, you can't speak to the doctor alone about your adult brother's health issues, in that the doctor won't disclose anything unless your brother signs a disclosure form. You don't even necessarily want him to do that; he's a reasonably functional adult, not someone over whom you have guardianship. If anyone should take him to this appointment, it's his wife.
Hold. Those. Boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:I would fly to CA. Ask your brother to schedule an appointment with the doctor so the 3 of you can sit down and talk face to face. Ask to speak with the doctor alone too, if necessary. Forget about his family issues, his mental health should be the focus.