Anonymous wrote:You can't help people who don't want to be helped.
But any financial help you offer needs to come with heavy strings. Personally, I'd make one offer. I'll pay for them to break their lease and move to a more affordable home. BUT this means I get a say in where they move and get to look over their finances to help them make a budget for their new reality. I'd want to manage their life in the short term essentially. If they can't manage it, I will, but I'm not just giving hand outs.
If they don't like that deal, fine. But that's my only offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok again, he is literally homeless though _ his disability benefits are being used to fund a home he's not allowed to live in and he has been hotel_hopping since Friday.
He is on day 2 of intensive outpatient program _ I don't want to enable but do people really advise just cutting bait and hoping he figures out a place to stay? Better to tough love him and hope he gets the picture or help him find a sublet etc? Also how does one get their money back from spouse in this situation? Both names on lease etc.
If you can help him find a place to stay, at least during his outpatient treatment, I'd do that, but don't get involved in the details of his relationship with his wife. You simply have no idea what is going on in his marriage, and you're not equipped to deal with it. Unless his wife has a restraining order, she can't keep him out of the house. If you can help him find a sublet, do it. I'd probably even float him the money for first month's rent. Don't promise to pay for more than you can afford. Don't pretend it's a loan--you'll never get any money back.
Anonymous wrote:Ok again, he is literally homeless though _ his disability benefits are being used to fund a home he's not allowed to live in and he has been hotel_hopping since Friday.
He is on day 2 of intensive outpatient program _ I don't want to enable but do people really advise just cutting bait and hoping he figures out a place to stay? Better to tough love him and hope he gets the picture or help him find a sublet etc? Also how does one get their money back from spouse in this situation? Both names on lease etc.
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:I think this thread shows the stigma of mental illness. Telling OP not to offer to help, to not offer support, to say out of it, to not engage, to not get involved in any way.
Listen to the poster who suggested contacting NAMI - they are much better suited to connect you to services and to help you navigate this than a board of people who are acting like mental illness is a horrible character flaw.
Any serious illness can be very difficult on a couple and it isn't strange or a lack of effort or poor character that are the reasons why SIL or brother are struggling. Mental illness (especially with no family support) is really, really hard on families, couples and individuals. You don't just man up and get over it.
The main priority should be getting brother a proper thorough assessment / diagnosis and getting into the treatment program that is best for his condition to figure out how to best manage / treat whatever he has. If your parents can help financially, it can go directly to treatment.
Selling the house in the middle of a mental health crisis would not be a good idea. Nor would taking the child out of stable child care.
OP please contact NAMI or other mental health for family resources in your area.
I also have a brother with mental illness. He is now properly treated and is employed in a stable low stress, still married and a great dad - although it wasn't always that way. We stuck by him through it all, just like we did when my sister had cancer. He still needs to live life in a way that allows him to manage his illness and we support him in that. Remember your brother didn't choose to have a mental illness and isn't just being a difficult, weak person
Wow, did you read the thread? Sounds like you’re seeing things that aren’t there.
First, his doctor is not convinced that he has bipolar at all.
Second, OP sees for herself that his bipolar meds aren’t working and are actually making him a lot worse.
Third, it’s really only the wife who insists there’s something wrong with him.
Fourth, he wants a lower stress job/life but she won’t let him do that because she needs him to bankroll her life of leisure and no responsibilities.
Anonymous wrote:I think this thread shows the stigma of mental illness. Telling OP not to offer to help, to not offer support, to say out of it, to not engage, to not get involved in any way.
Listen to the poster who suggested contacting NAMI - they are much better suited to connect you to services and to help you navigate this than a board of people who are acting like mental illness is a horrible character flaw.
Any serious illness can be very difficult on a couple and it isn't strange or a lack of effort or poor character that are the reasons why SIL or brother are struggling. Mental illness (especially with no family support) is really, really hard on families, couples and individuals. You don't just man up and get over it.
The main priority should be getting brother a proper thorough assessment / diagnosis and getting into the treatment program that is best for his condition to figure out how to best manage / treat whatever he has. If your parents can help financially, it can go directly to treatment.
Selling the house in the middle of a mental health crisis would not be a good idea. Nor would taking the child out of stable child care.
OP please contact NAMI or other mental health for family resources in your area.
I also have a brother with mental illness. He is now properly treated and is employed in a stable low stress, still married and a great dad - although it wasn't always that way. We stuck by him through it all, just like we did when my sister had cancer. He still needs to live life in a way that allows him to manage his illness and we support him in that. Remember your brother didn't choose to have a mental illness and isn't just being a difficult, weak person
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this thread shows the stigma of mental illness. Telling OP not to offer to help, to not offer support, to say out of it, to not engage, to not get involved in any way.
Listen to the poster who suggested contacting NAMI - they are much better suited to connect you to services and to help you navigate this than a board of people who are acting like mental illness is a horrible character flaw.
Any serious illness can be very difficult on a couple and it isn't strange or a lack of effort or poor character that are the reasons why SIL or brother are struggling. Mental illness (especially with no family support) is really, really hard on families, couples and individuals. You don't just man up and get over it.
The main priority should be getting brother a proper thorough assessment / diagnosis and getting into the treatment program that is best for his condition to figure out how to best manage / treat whatever he has. If your parents can help financially, it can go directly to treatment.
Selling the house in the middle of a mental health crisis would not be a good idea. Nor would taking the child out of stable child care.
OP please contact NAMI or other mental health for family resources in your area.
I also have a brother with mental illness. He is now properly treated and is employed in a stable low stress, still married and a great dad - although it wasn't always that way. We stuck by him through it all, just like we did when my sister had cancer. He still needs to live life in a way that allows him to manage his illness and we support him in that. Remember your brother didn't choose to have a mental illness and isn't just being a difficult, weak person
Wow, did you read the thread? Sounds like you’re seeing things that aren’t there.
First, his doctor is not convinced that he has bipolar at all.
Second, OP sees for herself that his bipolar meds aren’t working and are actually making him a lot worse.
Third, it’s really only the wife who insists there’s something wrong with him.
Fourth, he wants a lower stress job/life but she won’t let him do that because she needs him to bankroll her life of leisure and no responsibilities.
Anonymous wrote:I think this thread shows the stigma of mental illness. Telling OP not to offer to help, to not offer support, to say out of it, to not engage, to not get involved in any way.
Listen to the poster who suggested contacting NAMI - they are much better suited to connect you to services and to help you navigate this than a board of people who are acting like mental illness is a horrible character flaw.
Any serious illness can be very difficult on a couple and it isn't strange or a lack of effort or poor character that are the reasons why SIL or brother are struggling. Mental illness (especially with no family support) is really, really hard on families, couples and individuals. You don't just man up and get over it.
The main priority should be getting brother a proper thorough assessment / diagnosis and getting into the treatment program that is best for his condition to figure out how to best manage / treat whatever he has. If your parents can help financially, it can go directly to treatment.
Selling the house in the middle of a mental health crisis would not be a good idea. Nor would taking the child out of stable child care.
OP please contact NAMI or other mental health for family resources in your area.
I also have a brother with mental illness. He is now properly treated and is employed in a stable low stress, still married and a great dad - although it wasn't always that way. We stuck by him through it all, just like we did when my sister had cancer. He still needs to live life in a way that allows him to manage his illness and we support him in that. Remember your brother didn't choose to have a mental illness and isn't just being a difficult, weak person