Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by all the people supporting OP. She sounds very cold and harsh. Her brother's requests seem quite reasonable. I think she needs to step up and help him and cut it out with all this "boundaries" crap.
Anonymous wrote:Op, what is his disability? By calling it a "personality disorder" I a think you and others here are thinking narcisism or borderline personality disorder. But if he's on disability, he has to have been determined by the federal government to be unable to work in any way that could be self sufficient. There is a real deficiency in functioning going on, whereas you're characterizing him as a lazy mooch.
Also, do you know what his financial situation is? Can he actually afford rent, utilities, food and clothing?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I've dealt with more than one personality-disordered family member. Decide what you are comfortable with and do it. Send him a $15 giftcard for incidentals at the beginning of each month and tell him that is all you can do.
He will whine, complain, maybe even rage. You need to learn to ignore that. That is part of the disorder and how he is used to getting what he wants. Shut him down when he does that. End the conversation, don't respond to texts or voicemails until he can communicate properly. Don't bring it up again later - when he calms down talk to him normally. If he becomes abusive freeze him out. It sounds harsh but the guilt trip and demands will be neverending if you don't learn to shut down the manipulation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I totally understand where you are coming from. The issue is not the coat or the notebooks, it is the emotional manipulation, guilt trips, anger. It is exhausting. Perhaps give your brother a lump sum - maybe $250? That's it. From the lump sum he must buy what he needs.
By the way, my sister and your brother are identical twins if you know what I mean.
Then why didn't she set up those "boundaries" ahead of time? It sounds to me like OP is playing a cat and mouse game with her brother and that is completely unfair. She is being so passive aggressive in not defining her "boundaries." OP's brother is not the only person with the mental health problems in their brother-sister dynamic.
I did set boundaries. But therapist asked if I could help cover this one thing, which wasn’t one thing.
Obviously what you set was not well planned and inadequate. Don't you wonder why that happened? Aren't you going to take responsibility for that? You sound very good at casting shade but not at all good about taking ownership for your own bad decision-making and boundary-setting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I totally understand where you are coming from. The issue is not the coat or the notebooks, it is the emotional manipulation, guilt trips, anger. It is exhausting. Perhaps give your brother a lump sum - maybe $250? That's it. From the lump sum he must buy what he needs.
By the way, my sister and your brother are identical twins if you know what I mean.
Then why didn't she set up those "boundaries" ahead of time? It sounds to me like OP is playing a cat and mouse game with her brother and that is completely unfair. She is being so passive aggressive in not defining her "boundaries." OP's brother is not the only person with the mental health problems in their brother-sister dynamic.
I did set boundaries. But therapist asked if I could help cover this one thing, which wasn’t one thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I totally understand where you are coming from. The issue is not the coat or the notebooks, it is the emotional manipulation, guilt trips, anger. It is exhausting. Perhaps give your brother a lump sum - maybe $250? That's it. From the lump sum he must buy what he needs.
By the way, my sister and your brother are identical twins if you know what I mean.
Then why didn't she set up those "boundaries" ahead of time? It sounds to me like OP is playing a cat and mouse game with her brother and that is completely unfair. She is being so passive aggressive in not defining her "boundaries." OP's brother is not the only person with the mental health problems in their brother-sister dynamic.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I totally understand where you are coming from. The issue is not the coat or the notebooks, it is the emotional manipulation, guilt trips, anger. It is exhausting. Perhaps give your brother a lump sum - maybe $250? That's it. From the lump sum he must buy what he needs.
By the way, my sister and your brother are identical twins if you know what I mean.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I totally understand where you are coming from. The issue is not the coat or the notebooks, it is the emotional manipulation, guilt trips, anger. It is exhausting. Perhaps give your brother a lump sum - maybe $250? That's it. From the lump sum he must buy what he needs.
By the way, my sister and your brother are identical twins if you know what I mean.