Anonymous wrote:Op, ignore most of the crazy posters here.
They have dated knowledge - 30 yrs ago you could not go to college and often do just fine. It is much much harder now.
Also, paying for college is much harder now as expenses are sky high. Don't give up on your nephews. Keep trying in subtle ways.
Maybe you can invite them on a trip with you. Take them to CA or NYC or somewhere international.
Anonymous wrote:they are your sisters kids, right? What does SHE say? if she is ok with it then hell with what he says-( I'm Muslim so from a Mothers word is law culture regardless)- but in this situation they are her biological offspring and her word IS law. You are doing a wonderful thing by helping your nephews, some of the people on here have no family values at all. Ignore them-
have you spoken with your nephews, are they excited by the idea that they can go to college and have a different life or are they clueless/sattisfied with a working class life. It is getting increasingly difficult to live a middle class life without a college degree, the best they can hope for is to be working class and demographic trends point to working class=working poor. Who would want that for young people with their whole lives ahead of them? No amount of Trump speeches is going to bring those jobs or wages back- they are gone, as Steve Jobs famously pints out to Obama.
If Your nephews aren't really into this idea- be prepared will you be ok if they squander this opportunity and the $$ you are spending or will you or your own kids resent it?
You and your husband are good people.
Anonymous wrote:He has no obligation to pay for their college tuition. He is already putting a roof over their heads, clothes on their back, and food in their stomach. It is the deadbeat daddy's responsibility. MYOB because this man is already going way beyond the call of duty by raising some other dude's children. Give your sister's husband some credit. You don't know what type of financial sacrifices he has already made by raising your nephews.
OP, you crossed boundaries. You owe your brother in-law and sister an apology.
Anonymous wrote:Look, DCUM being what it is, pretty much everyone on this site is MC/UMC. We all know the importance of education, and most of us are doing pretty well for ourselves, or else we wouldn't be free to screw around on the internet during work hours.
The thing is, many of us also are from less privileged backgrounds, and the way that OP is using "working class" as as a slur is bound to rub some folks the wrong way.
I'm the PP whose aunt and uncle took a thoughtful and sensitive approach to nurturing my potential. I'll be forever grateful to them for that, but you know what they never did? They never made me feel like my parents were inferior to them just because my parents were working class.
Working class people work. That's what they do. They work hard, often physical, jobs. Both of my parents worked twice as hard as I do, longer hours, for a lot less money. While I sit at a desk all day, answer emails, make decisions, and use my brain, my mother continues to live with the effects of a work-related injury but she worked all the way to retirement and beyond.
So OP, you need to take a seat and look at how you are deploying language. When I think about "working class values" I think about my parents and what they gave up for my siblings and I.
Anonymous wrote:
Also, you haven't mentioned anything about your nephews. Have they expressed an interest in college? Have they gone to the guidance counselor? The internet? There are SAT and college resources online. You don't say anything about that except that you think they will turn into deadbeats, which signals to me that neither one of them are interested in college. If that is the case, then maybe a trade school or a vocational school is a better option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BIL makes decent money without going to college, but your nephews are doomed to be deadbeats?
Your title complains that BIL doesn't have money for the nephews college - why are you not complaining about your sister or their dad (the two adults biologically related and primarily responsible for them).
I think you should be pissed more at your sister than your BIL. Still, there's nothing for you to do here. They don't want your help. It's unfortunate because you sound as if you are attempting to be kind, but they don't want your help.
BIL is a layoff away from being bankrupt. He has no leverage to get raises. He hates his job. The 1990s =/= 2017-2020
Yes, my sister certainly knows how to pick 'em. FYI, when it comes to FAFSA and college aid, *all* parents inc. step-parents are responsible.
Anonymous wrote:
And, um, your BIL is an MD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OT, but I have a question: Why do you think they are going to turn into their biological father? It sounds like their mom is a reliable presence in their lives, their step-father is gainfully employed and is dutifully supporting his children and step-children (if not providing for their future education), their aunt and uncle are thriving. It sounds like their father is the (extreme) outlier here. Why would they end up like him as opposed to one of the other more successful people in their lives? Why do you look at them and see their father? That's a mighty big millstone you've placed around their necks.
For the sake of transparency: My sister is ignorant and fairly lazy. She would love for them to have a better life than her, but isn't interested in learning how to make that happen - which research shows is a common trait amongst working class parents. As in, parents like her are pretty hands off, they let the school handle the education; talking to guidance counselor about courses, reading college preparation parenting books, signing kid up for SAT prep, securing a math tutor are all foreign concepts. BIL isn't lazy, but he's also ignorant and should be seeing a shrink. Me and my husband helping is seen as an attack on his man of the house "power" - the guy is unstable. It would be like me and my husband telling my BIL, who's an MD, to stop offering health advice if he noticed something, you know.
Anonymous wrote:
OT, but I have a question: Why do you think they are going to turn into their biological father? It sounds like their mom is a reliable presence in their lives, their step-father is gainfully employed and is dutifully supporting his children and step-children (if not providing for their future education), their aunt and uncle are thriving. It sounds like their father is the (extreme) outlier here. Why would they end up like him as opposed to one of the other more successful people in their lives? Why do you look at them and see their father? That's a mighty big millstone you've placed around their necks.