Anonymous wrote:And increasingly been relying on me and my nuclear family to make up for the nuclear family she’s decided to give up on. She wants to be very involved as an aunt but it’s gone overboard with too much interest in my kids. It’s starting to feel unhealthy. Our parents don’t help, either. They encourage her involvement, even provide the transportation. They invite her along every time they visit us or meet us somewhere for the weekend, for example.
There’s absolutely nothing wrong with her— she’s well off with a great job, she’s attractive, she’s kind… I feel like she’s just decided to take the easy way out and more or less has turned to me and said, well, I’ll live vicariously through you, ok?
I think in the long run this situation could damage our relationship. DH has run out of patience, too. I do believe to some extent that if someone of her means and position with hobbies and friends wants a family in todays world, they can (most of the time) make it happen. I personally think she just doesn’t want to take a risk and put in the effort, and she knows she has our parents willing to push her, literally and figuratively, through my doorway if need be.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not smug. My kids are getting older and she’s going to have to back off. I have two SILs in the same position as my sister who do not behave this way. They live our kids but have boundaries and my MIL doesn’t drag them along every time she visits. My sister doesn’t think boundaries apply to her. I do not think she should be relying on me and my family to provide that experience for her because she decided to throw in the towel on dating. Do some here think I should invite that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You describe her in your initial post as successful, independent, but then later on describe her as attached by the hip to your parents with no life of her own. So that’s confusing.
I’m having trouble understanding how this concrete affects your life in a negative way. Attendance at a swim meet wouldn’t bother me.
How do your kids feel about her?
They used to be enthusiastic about seeing her but now she’s a fixture to them they're so used to they say hi to and then disappear into their rooms to do homework or call friends.
She’s successful in that she has a lot of resources but our parents step in with her too much and she welcomes it. Sometimes, I see it like this—imagine someone who has plenty of job offers that would pay enough to afford a great apartment but opts to stay in mom and dad’s basement because it’s so cozy and mom and dad just adore the company.
So you think they're all pathetic - not your problem. They're far away and can be as co-dependent on each other as they want. My uncle lived in my grandparents house for his entire life in a codependent relationship. Was it sad thats the way his life turned out? Sure. But it also ended up having a silver lining in the end when my grandma was infirm for 20 years after her husband died and my uncle spent 20 years taking her out to lunch, learning how to make her dinner instead of the other way around, taking her to doctors appointments, and being a companion. It's not a life I would want and we all judged it, but in the end all appreciated that he was there in the end (that lasted 20 years!) as well
Anonymous wrote:I send my kid to three different relatives on weekends. It's so nice. I don't see anything bad coming from it.
I spend my childhood summers at grandparents. Best time.
Are you and your DH both controlling? Why wouldn't you want to spend time just the two of you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not smug. My kids are getting older and she’s going to have to back off. I have two SILs in the same position as my sister who do not behave this way. They live our kids but have boundaries and my MIL doesn’t drag them along every time she visits. My sister doesn’t think boundaries apply to her. I do not think she should be relying on me and my family to provide that experience for her because she decided to throw in the towel on dating. Do some here think I should invite that?
We get it. You're special and important because you managed to catch a man and get married. Your nuclear family is now the most important and unique thing in the world. A family member who wants to spend time together must want to live vicariously through you because she can't get a man, because you're so amazing, and you accomplished the one thing in life that a woman is meant to do.
Nailed it. I don’t understand though, who wouldn’t want more people to help care and love on their children?
Having been in the position of the OP, the issue is not more help with the kids. It’s overstepping boundaries. The parents invited the sister to stay at someone else’s house without asking. Now the OP has to host additional people for a week and wasn’t consulted if that was how she wanted to spend her time and money. Family closeness is NOT an excuse for lack of boundaries. When this happens repeatedly, it feels like everyone expects you to fulfill their needs and they don’t actually care about your needs.
Anonymous wrote:You are so judgmental. How is it the easy way out for her to accept, with what must be sadness and maturity, that she is going to be stepping away from creating her own nuclear family? I can't imagine my sister feeling the way you do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not smug. My kids are getting older and she’s going to have to back off. I have two SILs in the same position as my sister who do not behave this way. They live our kids but have boundaries and my MIL doesn’t drag them along every time she visits. My sister doesn’t think boundaries apply to her. I do not think she should be relying on me and my family to provide that experience for her because she decided to throw in the towel on dating. Do some here think I should invite that?
We get it. You're special and important because you managed to catch a man and get married. Your nuclear family is now the most important and unique thing in the world. A family member who wants to spend time together must want to live vicariously through you because she can't get a man, because you're so amazing, and you accomplished the one thing in life that a woman is meant to do.
Nailed it. I don’t understand though, who wouldn’t want more people to help care and love on their children?
Having been in the position of the OP, the issue is not more help with the kids. It’s overstepping boundaries. The parents invited the sister to stay at someone else’s house without asking. Now the OP has to host additional people for a week and wasn’t consulted if that was how she wanted to spend her time and money. Family closeness is NOT an excuse for lack of boundaries. When this happens repeatedly, it feels like everyone expects you to fulfill their needs and they don’t actually care about your needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You describe her in your initial post as successful, independent, but then later on describe her as attached by the hip to your parents with no life of her own. So that’s confusing.
I’m having trouble understanding how this concrete affects your life in a negative way. Attendance at a swim meet wouldn’t bother me.
How do your kids feel about her?
They used to be enthusiastic about seeing her but now she’s a fixture to them they're so used to they say hi to and then disappear into their rooms to do homework or call friends.
She’s successful in that she has a lot of resources but our parents step in with her too much and she welcomes it. Sometimes, I see it like this—imagine someone who has plenty of job offers that would pay enough to afford a great apartment but opts to stay in mom and dad’s basement because it’s so cozy and mom and dad just adore the company.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your sister needs ways to fill her time outside of work and is developing a codependency on your family to fill that time too much for your comfort and availability.
If the getting together feels too much too often, can you just reduce the family events and visits to a more manageable schedule?
One sister visiting another a few times a year is codependency? wow.
Of course OP can "set boundaries" (which as a reminder is something you set and hold for yourself, not something other people hold for you) and never see her sister at all if she wants to, but wanting to be an involved aunt by visiting a few times a year and trying to build a relationships with nieces and nephews beyond sending them gifts does not make you "codependent". I have my own family and still try to build a relationship with my sisters kids so that I can be another trusted and supportive adults in their lives, and I'd love for my kids to have that with my sister. Our aunts and uncles were very distant. Its their choice that they wanted to do that, but also sad my sister and I only had our parents versus a community of adults we knew were there for us.
Swim meets and holidays are not a few times a year. Sounds like she comes several weekends a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your sister needs ways to fill her time outside of work and is developing a codependency on your family to fill that time too much for your comfort and availability.
If the getting together feels too much too often, can you just reduce the family events and visits to a more manageable schedule?
One sister visiting another a few times a year is codependency? wow.
Of course OP can "set boundaries" (which as a reminder is something you set and hold for yourself, not something other people hold for you) and never see her sister at all if she wants to, but wanting to be an involved aunt by visiting a few times a year and trying to build a relationships with nieces and nephews beyond sending them gifts does not make you "codependent". I have my own family and still try to build a relationship with my sisters kids so that I can be another trusted and supportive adults in their lives, and I'd love for my kids to have that with my sister. Our aunts and uncles were very distant. Its their choice that they wanted to do that, but also sad my sister and I only had our parents versus a community of adults we knew were there for us.
Anonymous wrote:I get the sense that this is a story that is falling apart.
A major part of my skepticism has to do with that OP really hasn't provided details of how sister is too intrusive in the family's life. What does that really mean? What does she do that is interfering?