Anonymous wrote:We love each other and wish the best for each other but really have nothing to do with each other! We haven’t seen each other since our parents funeral four years ago. We’re just so different. We rarely talk but text information and occasional well wishes.
Do you think my parents did something wrong? We were each individually very close to our parents and had happy childhoods. Our parents and our childhoods are all we have to talk about.
Anonymous wrote:
I love my sister but we are not super besties. We usually text once every two weeks or so. We do quick Alexa video calls every month or two. We see each other twice a year or so. (She lives two hours away, so it's not that hard. Would be more except she is unfortunately estranged with our parents, long story, so I split holidays.)
So I mean yeah we have our own lives most of the time, and then connect when we can and make it a priority to do so. But polite indifference? That's just so... sad. What a bleak way to go through life.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's important to maintain relationships with family. It's grounding. It's the people that knew you since you were born, and who will know you when you are old. Friends will often come in and out of your life, siblings will always be there. In fact, since my parents will probably die decades before me, and since my wife and I did not meet until our 20s, my sister will know me the longest of anyone on earth.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's important to maintain relationships with family. It's grounding. It's the people that knew you since you were born, and who will know you when you are old. Friends will often come in and out of your life, siblings will always be there. In fact, since my parents will probably die decades before me, and since my wife and I did not meet until our 20s, my sister will know me the longest of anyone on earth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's important to maintain relationships with family. It's grounding. It's the people that knew you since you were born, and who will know you when you are old. Friends will often come in and out of your life, siblings will always be there. In fact, since my parents will probably die decades before me, and since my wife and I did not meet until our 20s, my sister will know me the longest of anyone on earth.
I love my sister but we are not super besties. We usually text once every two weeks or so. We do quick Alexa video calls every month or two. We see each other twice a year or so. (She lives two hours away, so it's not that hard. Would be more except she is unfortunately estranged with our parents, long story, so I split holidays.)
So I mean yeah we have our own lives most of the time, and then connect when we can and make it a priority to do so. But polite indifference? That's just so... sad. What a bleak way to go through life.
It's funny. I had a coworker like you who said "family is everything" and she was so upset her kids weren't into their cousins. Her kids had very strong friendships some since childhood. Meanwhile this woman had a sister going through chemo who hit hard times and as close as they supposedly were, she barely visited. As well off as this woman was (her income was to buy fancy things-her husband was a big earner) she refused to give her sister a dime. So um family is everything? I visited my friends having chemo and if a friend hit financial hard times I would help.
Cool story. Good thing I am not your friend. Sorry you have such a bad relationship with your siblings
No need to project that onto me.
Anonymous wrote:I’m as close to my sister as I can be given the political climate and misinformation. One of us is a liberal Democrat and the other a Trump Republican; one of us volunteers with gun control groups and the other belongs to a gun range and belongs to the NRA.
We’re very good about never, ever discussing issues but it’s very limiting. We don’t ever like to read the same type of books or watch the same shows/movies.
It’s kind of amazing we came from the same house and parents!
Anonymous wrote:Same. My brother and I are 22 months apart and have little in common. He's an arborist; I'm a corporate lawyer. I like cities; he likes the outdoors. He's non-confrontational; I'm happy to argue. He lives on the west coast; I live on the east coast. We're polite and reasonably friendly, but we both hate talking on the phone and we see each other once a year (pre-COVID). I am not sure what my parents could have done to resolve the fundamental issue, which is that we don't share interests.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's important to maintain relationships with family. It's grounding. It's the people that knew you since you were born, and who will know you when you are old. Friends will often come in and out of your life, siblings will always be there. In fact, since my parents will probably die decades before me, and since my wife and I did not meet until our 20s, my sister will know me the longest of anyone on earth.
I love my sister but we are not super besties. We usually text once every two weeks or so. We do quick Alexa video calls every month or two. We see each other twice a year or so. (She lives two hours away, so it's not that hard. Would be more except she is unfortunately estranged with our parents, long story, so I split holidays.)
So I mean yeah we have our own lives most of the time, and then connect when we can and make it a priority to do so. But polite indifference? That's just so... sad. What a bleak way to go through life.
It's funny. I had a coworker like you who said "family is everything" and she was so upset her kids weren't into their cousins. Her kids had very strong friendships some since childhood. Meanwhile this woman had a sister going through chemo who hit hard times and as close as they supposedly were, she barely visited. As well off as this woman was (her income was to buy fancy things-her husband was a big earner) she refused to give her sister a dime. So um family is everything? I visited my friends having chemo and if a friend hit financial hard times I would help.
Anonymous wrote:Oldest of 5 and my siblings are super close. We had a very erratic/abusive upbringing with borderline personality disorder mother, which surviving that home life has bonded us more than siblings growing up with stable parents. I also have noticed that if you're from a big family and really overall loved, its probably because your sibling bond. Makes me sad if I ever had kids it will be 2 or 3 due to age and fertility issues, but recognize that the circumstances that brought my siblings and I closer also were incredibly damaging.
Sure there are many big families who didn't have unstable/abusive environment who also have closer siblings. Its probably that you can't really get away from each other when they're so many of you.