Anonymous wrote:I didn’t read the entire thread, but from the original post it sounds like the wife is using the “let her husband handle his family” rule as an excuse to not hang out with your family too much. Is there a reason why she doesn’t like you or your family?
I have family like this too. The wives won’t take on the mental load of their husband’s family but I have a feeling it’s because they don’t want to host as often as they would otherwise have to if they responded to every request to meet up.
Anonymous wrote:As the summer wraps up, i've been really upset this week about the lack of relationship I have with my brother. Over the past 6 months he has only reached out 2 times (and once was actually his wife, not him I think). They live 40 min away and we have young kids the same age and he is a teacher so has had time all summer. We have similar political views and like to do alot of the same things. I had a vision of our kids being close- and my brother has verbalized this too but I dont think my 2 year old even knows his older cousins (3 yr older than him) name at this point.
I dont think its that my brother and my SIL dont like me. I think its that he's so self centered and likes doing his own thing and is bad at communicating. Last time we talked on the phone he was like "oh we havent seen you since last month, we should do something soon" and when we get together is seems like everyone has a good time, but when I reach out to hang out or get together, he never responds. His wife tries to make him manage his relationship with his family, so while she does loop me into larger events and invites me to the kids birthdays and for example Easter this year- Im just so sad.
Previously I would reach out and then clear my calendar that weekend just hoping they would want to get together and I stopped doing that because I was sick of plans (also with parents who live nearby) just always centering around him and his family's needs and schedule. He's always been favored by my parents even though he can be rude to them.
Im thinking of sending him an email about all of this, prob should call him but honestly he rarely picks up (not just a problem with me). Im single and just have one kid and thought moving back to this area would allow me to have a relationship with my family. Im just sad.
Being sad is ok - it means you’re a person with feelings. Noting that he doesn’t want a closer relationship is insightful. I know it can be painful.Like thats the thing- im also busy and have friends and connections, but I want to prioritize time with them when I can; its just clear they dont want to and that's what makes me sad.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like your brother isn’t actively rejecting you, but he’s also not showing up in the way you hoped. People can say they value closeness but still fail to act on it. It may be useful to name this as a pattern, not a one-time event. That allows you to meet him more realistically, (at least in your head and from a place of figuring things out) not from the place of the vision you had.
If you're thinking of writing an email or calling:
Know your intention. Do you want to be heard? Create change? Set a boundary? Clarify your needs?
Be prepared for the possibility that he may not respond as you'd hope. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t express yourself—but it’s worth protecting your expectations.
Ask yourself:
-What has he actually shown me he’s capable of offering?
-How does that compare with what I need in a close sibling relationship?
Decide What You Need Right Now. “Do I need to express my hurt?” “Do I need clearer boundaries around how much I chase this?”
“Do I need to stop hoping for something different and grieve what isn’t?” You don’t have to choose either total disconnection or pouring yourself out again. You might instead choose a connection that expects less and protects your emotional energy.
Where else can you build community and connection for yourself and your child?
Are there friends, cousins, neighbors, or parent groups who can offer the presence and mutuality you’ve been craving?
Anonymous wrote:No one in your family likes the one person making an effort at having a non-dysfunctional relationship, and you’ve deemed her a doormat. For her own sake, hopefully she’ll drop the rope.Anonymous wrote:This is my brother. He's always been this way. It's out of sight, out of mind. If it weren't for his wife (whom no one actually likes), he would hardly talk to our parents. He didn't before she married him. She basically manages his relationship with our parents. But, that's because she sees it as a chore. In her culture, that's what wives do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my brother. He's always been this way. It's out of sight, out of mind. If it weren't for his wife (whom no one actually likes), he would hardly talk to our parents. He didn't before she married him. She basically manages his relationship with our parents. But, that's because she sees it as a chore. In her culture, that's what wives do.
Ha, ha! I missed this one! Why does my brother not see me all the time while nobody in our family likes his wife! Let me write him an e-mail and call him about it! II can guarantee that with your/your family's attitude you're not going to be invited to any events down the road at all, much less have weekly get-togethers!