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Care and Feeding: Treating children unequally
Dear Care and Feeding,
We have four adult children (all in their 20s/early 30s) and are currently facing a great deal of family conflict around the unequal way we raised them. To be honest, we were pretty strict parents with our oldest daughter “Lily.” From the outset, we told her that at 18, she’d be moving out—living with us indefinitely was not an option—and she’d need to pay for college by herself. She got into an expensive Ivy League school that did not offer enough financial aid. She was heartbroken and ended up going to a lower-ranked, yet still excellent, college on a full merit scholarship. She followed through with our expectations and never asked us to move back in, even when she took a low-paying job right out of college. She made it through her 20s with a few bumps and bruises but is now engaged to a man with a high-paying job, and she has even earned her graduate degree! We’re very proud.
In contrast, our youngest child “Jen” was raised without many of these same expectations: We knew we could pay for her college, and having had the benefit of seeing our other children leave the nest successfully, we weren’t as insistent that she move out immediately. We paid full price for a private college for Jen (equally ranked to Lily’s) and she graduated with no debt. We also allowed her to live with us during her first year after college; she had secured a job, but wanted to save money for a down payment on a house. She ended up buying a home at 23 (Lily wasn’t able to until 29) and as a result is now significantly wealthier than Lily is.
Lily and Jen have always had some friction, but now their main conflict is the unequal expectations we had of them. It’s true we were much harder on Lily, and Jen had a “safety net” her older sister never benefited from. Lily has held on to a lot of resentment for this and has started to throw it in our faces during family arguments. In my opinion, we were doing the best we could, and it seems ungrateful of Lily to complain when her life is going so well right now. I think she’s harboring jealousy around Jen’s financial success and it’s making her feel insecure.
The jealousy is starting to color every interaction between Lily and us, and between Lily and Jen. Did we do something wrong? How should we handle this moving forward? Is it reasonable that Lily’s upset? Should we do something to “level the playing field,” so to speak? I’d appreciate any advice you can offer.
—Torn in Tulsa
Dear Torn,
Lily has all the makings for some deep resentment, but she is also at a point in her life where she has to learn to look at how fortunate she is and to appreciate all that she has, more than she resents the disparity in how she and her sister were raised. What you and your spouse can do to help that is to simply acknowledge the difference and apologize, if there’s anything that you sincerely regret or feel bad about—such as being stricter with Lily and making her feel unwelcome to stay in your home beyond the age of 18 just because you were worried she would be unable to learn to live independently. You needn’t apologize for having different means at different times, but Lily should hear you recognize how both the change in your financial status and your parenting ideologies affected her and her sister, and that you did the best you could for all of your children. Acknowledge her feelings and encourage her to express them respectfully. You don’t owe her a check, just understanding and empathy. Hopefully, she can extend the same to you sooner rather than later.
We have four adult children (all in their 20s/early 30s) and are currently facing a great deal of family conflict around the unequal way we raised them. To be honest, we were pretty strict parents with our oldest daughter “Lily.” From the outset, we told her that at 18, she’d be moving out—living with us indefinitely was not an option—and she’d need to pay for college by herself. She got into an expensive Ivy League school that did not offer enough financial aid. She was heartbroken and ended up going to a lower-ranked, yet still excellent, college on a full merit scholarship. She followed through with our expectations and never asked us to move back in, even when she took a low-paying job right out of college. She made it through her 20s with a few bumps and bruises but is now engaged to a man with a high-paying job, and she has even earned her graduate degree! We’re very proud.
In contrast, our youngest child “Jen” was raised without many of these same expectations: We knew we could pay for her college, and having had the benefit of seeing our other children leave the nest successfully, we weren’t as insistent that she move out immediately. We paid full price for a private college for Jen (equally ranked to Lily’s) and she graduated with no debt. We also allowed her to live with us during her first year after college; she had secured a job, but wanted to save money for a down payment on a house. She ended up buying a home at 23 (Lily wasn’t able to until 29) and as a result is now significantly wealthier than Lily is.
Lily and Jen have always had some friction, but now their main conflict is the unequal expectations we had of them. It’s true we were much harder on Lily, and Jen had a “safety net” her older sister never benefited from. Lily has held on to a lot of resentment for this and has started to throw it in our faces during family arguments. In my opinion, we were doing the best we could, and it seems ungrateful of Lily to complain when her life is going so well right now. I think she’s harboring jealousy around Jen’s financial success and it’s making her feel insecure.
The jealousy is starting to color every interaction between Lily and us, and between Lily and Jen. Did we do something wrong? How should we handle this moving forward? Is it reasonable that Lily’s upset? Should we do something to “level the playing field,” so to speak? I’d appreciate any advice you can offer.
—Torn in Tulsa
Dear Torn,
Lily has all the makings for some deep resentment, but she is also at a point in her life where she has to learn to look at how fortunate she is and to appreciate all that she has, more than she resents the disparity in how she and her sister were raised. What you and your spouse can do to help that is to simply acknowledge the difference and apologize, if there’s anything that you sincerely regret or feel bad about—such as being stricter with Lily and making her feel unwelcome to stay in your home beyond the age of 18 just because you were worried she would be unable to learn to live independently. You needn’t apologize for having different means at different times, but Lily should hear you recognize how both the change in your financial status and your parenting ideologies affected her and her sister, and that you did the best you could for all of your children. Acknowledge her feelings and encourage her to express them respectfully. You don’t owe her a check, just understanding and empathy. Hopefully, she can extend the same to you sooner rather than later.
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That is utterly shit advice. They say Lily is ungrateful. What does she have to be grateful for? You basically tossed her out of the house and told her not to darken your doorstep again. They're very proud of her. Nope, nope, they don't even get to claim that much of her success. WTF is wrong with you, LW?
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Why, yes. Yes it is. You'll be lucky to come out of this with a relationship with Lily. And what a marvelous thing she's engaged to a guy with a high-paying job. /sarcasm
I'd really like to know if they charged Jen rent when she was living with them. I'm guessing not.
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Its very obvious they disadvantaged one child over the other. Frankly, they it sounds like these people are *very* well off, so they should offer to do something large, financially to make it up to the older child.
And even then, it won't mend this shit. But it'll be a fucking step in the right direction.
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I am in my late 30s and have a good relationship with my parents. We speak on the phone weekly. Last Sunday, my mother informed me that they gave my sister a chunk of money to help with a down payment on a house. She told me I wouldn’t receive a matching sum because my husband and I already own a house and his parents gave us a generous gift when we were buying it. My parents aren’t wealthy, so I understand their decision. Still, it stings! I think my parents are making assumptions about my financial position. I also believe their choice to give money to my younger sister is a declaration of greater love for her. Should I bring this up again?
SARAH
You should definitely bring it up if this gift is going to interfere with your relationship with your parents or your sister. (I can’t tell if this is a passing sting or one that may lead to lasting resentment.) Before you do, though, consider a few points to make the conversation more productive.
Our parents’ money is theirs. Whether they are fabulously rich or just squeaking by, they can spend it however they like. And adult children have no entitlement to it. Here, for instance, your parents decided they wanted both daughters to enjoy the economic advantages of homeownership. This meant giving money to one child but not to another (who already owns a home). Broadly speaking, they put you in the same position.
Still, I am sympathetic with your feelings. Sibling rivalry for parental love can be painful. So, while I recommend talking to your parents, it’s not to air a grievance. It’s to let them know that your feelings are hurt by your (likely false!) perception that their gift to your sister signals greater love for her.
Add quickly that you understand their decision and aren’t trying to wheedle a gift out of them. You simply want to be open with them. I hope the ensuing conversation reassures you. (And for parents: If you intend to make unequal gifts, it can be helpful to discuss the issue in advance. Feelings about parental gifts can run strong!)
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/16/style/parents-money-down-payment.html
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Fuck you, LW. You're lucky she's still willing to speak to you at all, with this attitude:
Lily has held on to a lot of resentment for this and has started to throw it in our faces during family arguments. In my opinion, we were doing the best we could, and it seems ungrateful of Lily to complain when her life is going so well right now.
And frankly when she goes no-contact you will richly deserve it. You have never done the best you could for her. You certainly aren't now - a sincere apology and admission of failure to support and show up for her might go a long way, but that would involve taking responsibility for your own shit instead of offloading it on your oldest daughter (clearly the Assigned Scapegoat in your family) and condemning her for being "ungrateful".
Did we do something wrong?
Facepalming *hard* at this disingenuous fuckery.
Also: Jen is obviously a perfect sweet angel who has no part in this "conflict" at all! It's allllll her "jealous" older sister's fault, says her extremely objective parent, who hasn't been playing their kids off against each other for decades or anything. (Constant comparisons of their financial status, with implications for how worthy and accomplished they are: great parenting! Totally inexplicable that the one who suffered financial hardships with no familial support would resent hearing about how wealthy her little sister is.)
I hope Lily has a great life and useful therapy and gets the hell away from her parents and their mind-games. I hope Jen also gets therapy re: the golden child/ungrateful child dichotomy their parents have set up and the siblings can eventually talk to each other without that hanging over their heads. (Hmm, wonder how those other two siblings feel about all this. Maybe they're boys and the parents just don't feel as compelled to police their emotions about everything and force them to perform gratitude.)
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I wonder about situations where siblings get vastly, unfairly different amounts of money support from parents for reasons that aren't the parents' fault, though. "When our first was born, we were really just scraping by, but by the time the youngest got here, we were more stable," or, on the other hand, "When our first was born, we were in a great position, but by the time the youngest got here, that bubble had burst."
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Completely off topic but I love your icon.
An awful lot of running to do!
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As soon as the words "don't tell your sisters" came up I told them. I wanted to be above board with them regarding what did and did not come my way. The only thing we never discussed was college money. And I wish we had. I got not one dime. But both of my sisters went thru and I have no idea if they paid for it (like I did, 3 jobs a semester). I also was the only one to move away for grad school. I was dropped off with the phrase "don't call us if you get in trouble or land in the hospital. we cannot help you" and I never did.
I told my sisters about the mortgage bc if she dropped dead I wanted to be paid first from the proceeds of the house before the will. I still have not been paid back and my sisters know that my "loan" still stands. I learned the hard way that secrets were bad and that my sisters either had to stick together or stand alone. We get on OK. We don't like.. live in each others pockets. but we all know that if needed we can depend on each other in a pinch. And I credit that with always being honest with them about circumstances.
If Lily and Jen want to form a relationship with each other with no secrets, then they need to have a discussion about it. And I would not fault Lily for never speaking to her terrible parents again.
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I was on my own after I had a child at 16 and got out of my abusive forced marriage at 18.
My (WEALTHY) parents wouldn't LEND me $300 for a reconditioned car radiator, so I burned out the engine of my paid-off used car because patching the hole during a scorching summer wasn't enough. I had to go into debt and get a car loan. I worked long hours with a long commute and paid out the nose for daycare.
Those same parents PAID MY BROTHER'S WIFE TO STAY HOME WITH THEIR 3 KIDS, so she could be a SAHM. (They also received down payments for two houses and a couple of vehicles.)
My younger brother and I have an extremely distant relationship for various reasons (partly because he's a hardcore Christian), but the Golden Child/Scapegoat dynamic in the family, including him being rewarded for tattling on me and therefore becoming a spy/snoop, did NOT help matters any.
(My mother is an abusive narcissist, playing us against each other was part of the fun for her.)
Their argument was that he was being rewarded for doing things "right," and I was being punished for my teenage "mistake," but he also flunked out of college with a drug problem at one point, soooo . . . that doesn't quite scan. (He did go back, succeed, and is now an education professional, but the point remains that he was allowed to screw up and recover, I wasn't.)
I try not to resent HIM for the disparate treatment, but I sure as hell resent my parents for it, especially my mother, who inherited everything after my Dad died in my early 30's.
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I'm so glad I'm an only child and I'm so, so glad I'm never having kids.