minoanmiss: Minoan youth carrying vase, likely full of wine (Wine)
minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2022-03-04 09:45 am

Dear Prudence & Pay Dirt: Two Sisters (And Sociopolitics)

I wanted to compare and contrast these letters.



My parents, now in their late 70s, made awful financial decisions that culminated in them taking early social security-- a combined $1600 per month, with no other retirement or savings to live on. They both have mobility issues, and my dad is having memory issues, so working isn’t a possibility.

Two years ago, in order to keep them nearby in our increasingly expensive area, my sister and I decided that my parents would move in with my family, and my sister would contribute $400/month toward their living expenses. We didn’t have a written contract, but we do have a record of her doing this since they moved in.

Last month, we had a blowup with my sister over her refusal to get her kids vaccinated, and she stopped talking to all of us. And she’s stopped contributing funds. Do I have any recourse? Between debt payments and paying for physical therapy and other medical bills, my parents don’t have anything left over for anything social or other needs, so now it’s falling on my family to pay even more, on top of the increased utilities, food, etc. I’m furious that my sister put us in this position.

–We Still Need That!


Dear Still Need That,

Unfortunately, there’s no way to force your sister to pay up. She may have a moral obligation to help, but she has no legal obligation. I’m sorry that your family has to take on more of a burden because she’s chosen to selfishly withhold her contribution, and also that she’s selfishly refusing to vaccinate her children, which puts both them and your elderly parents at risk. For now, I think you just have to plan as if those contributions are not going to materialize, and budget accordingly.






I’m having a serious problem with my older sister, “Ella,” who is my only family. Our parents died when we were young, and we ended up moving through a lot of homes over a very unstable childhood. Ella often looked after me like a mother, even though there are just two years between us. For a long time, I would have said she was my best friend, but that changed radically when she met her now husband, when she was 19. He is a regressive bigot who opposes all my core values, and I am sorry to say that Ella has pretty much taken on his views as her own over the last several years. We are now both in our late twenties and only see each other at holidays and when I invite just Ella on occasional shopping trips, as I can’t stand being around her husband, and he refers to me as a “bad influence” on his wife.

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The issue that has arisen between us recently is that I am the maid of honor for my best friend, “Anne,” at her wedding this year. Anne is marrying another woman, who is also one of my close friends. I obviously have never spoken much about Anne with my sister and her husband, as I try to stick to subjects that they won’t be able to use as starting points for their bigoted rants. (I once mentioned a friend with a foreign-sounding name and got treated to an hour-long lecture on “scum” who are “overrunning the country,” for instance.) Another member of the wedding party recently posted some photos on social media of us at a dress fitting, where she mentioned the two future brides, and Ella saw. She also commented. Her comments were horrendous, all directed at me and saying how ashamed our parents would be if they knew I had grown up to be friends with “degenerates and perverts.” Ella told me, there in the comments, that our relationship as sisters would “have to end” if I didn’t pull out of this wedding. She was blocked by the friend who had posted the pics, but everyone including Anne saw the comments first.

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Anne called to ask if I was OK. She caught me in tears, and was incredibly kind. She told me that if I wanted to pull out of the wedding party to preserve my relationship with my sister, she would be very sad but would understand and did not expect me to choose between her and my sister. I told her that I didn’t want to do that at all—I’m not ashamed of celebrating my best friend’s relationship and was honored she wanted me involved. Anne seemed really happy about this but reiterated that I just needed to tell her before a deposit deadline if I changed my mind. She understands difficult family relationships very well, as she is now estranged from her own and understands some of my pain with my sister and feeling I’ve lost her to bigotry.

My problem is that I’m not sure what to do. Part of me really wants to pull out the wedding to appease my sister and preserve the fragile relationship we have—she has texted me since to say she will miss me terribly if she “has to” cut me off over this, and that she is waiting for me to reach out to “fix things” with her. In spite of what I said to Anne, I am torn—there is a small desire in me to just agree to pull out and keep the relationship with Ella, even if I’d feel ashamed about it, especially now I know that Anne would be kind about it and I wouldn’t lose her friendship. Can you advise me on what to do? I know what the objectively right thing to do is, but I’m struggling with the temptation not to do it to preserve my relationship with my sister.

— My Sister or My Values


Dear My Sister or My Values,

Do you think Ella has ever said to herself, “I’m struggling with whether I should be an outspoken bigot about things that aren’t my business or preserve my relationship with my sister”? Do you think she cares if she alienates you with her comments? I seriously doubt it—in fact, she’s already threatened to end the relationship. Don’t compromise your values and your friendship with someone who’s actually a decent person to stay on the good side of someone who’s not, and who will inevitably cut you off over something else stupid in the future. Be in the wedding. Tell Ella you don’t care what she thinks. It’s unlikely that she’ll actually cut you off, and the realization that her backward views don’t control you and you aren’t afraid of her might give your relationship the reset that it needs. And if it doesn’t, and she does? You might take a lesson from your queer friend’s experience that while family ties are important, maintaining them at the expense of your own peace and wellbeing is not worth it.
mommy: Wanda Maximoff; Scarlet Witch (Default)

[personal profile] mommy 2022-03-04 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Letter 2: Oof. It looks like LW's relationship with their sister ended years ago and a shambling zombie relationship is all that is left. Ella has been married for maybe a decade and she's reached the point where she sounds like an Alt-Right troll on Twitter. That's a "pre-emptively block and move on" from me, but I can see how it would be upsetting for LW. It's hard to let go of people you used to be close to.
blueinkedfrost: (Default)

[personal profile] blueinkedfrost 2022-03-05 07:37 am (UTC)(link)
The advice for both is on point.

Sister #1: worthless anti-vaxxer, failure at filial duties, subsidising her parents cannot be forced out of her. Her company is literally dangerous at this time. Nothing the LW can do but farewell.

Sister #2: Prudie nails it with Do you think Ella has ever said to herself, “I’m struggling with whether I should be an outspoken bigot about things that aren’t my business or preserve my relationship with my sister”? Only one person ever seems to agonise about the relationship in these situations, and it's not the flagrant bigot.
lemonsharks: (LGBTQueer (bi))

[personal profile] lemonsharks 2022-03-05 08:39 am (UTC)(link)

I know what I would do, and what I would do is write both the offending assholes off and tip the IRS that they really ought to be audited.

But I am also a vindictive bitch sometimes.

cimorene: abstract painting in blue and gold and black (cloudy)

[personal profile] cimorene 2022-03-05 12:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I do feel bad for these sisters. I can sympathize with them reaching out for help, although from the outside it's pretty obvious nothing can be done.

It sucks for the first sister that her sister's a dick, that she's now bearing this financial burden alone, and that there's nothing she can do about it. Her sister can't be relied on, ethically (to keep her promises) or as a family member to help her family. And it sucks for the second LW that she has to make this choice, even though as everyone notes the choice is pretty obvious and the sister isn't a healthy connection anymore. It's heartbreaking that someone who was once nurturing to LW is now trying to emotionally blackmail her into cutting off her actually valuable friendship in order to maitain a ghost of a sisterly relationship with a person whose guiding principle is bigotry that she evidently willingly brainwashed herself into as an adult.
conuly: (Default)

[personal profile] conuly 2022-03-05 05:13 pm (UTC)(link)
The only thing that concerns me about the second letter is that I'm getting a faint whiff of controlling/abusive vibes from Ella's husband. It's specifically the fact that he refers to his wife's sister as a "bad influence". His wife is not his child, her sister is not her pal - that phrasing is really skeevy.

But LW can't force Ella to leave him, no more than she can force her to stop being hateful. And it's certainly possible he's a bigot but not an abuser, that I'm reading more into those two words than is really there.

Even if it were 100% certain that he was abusing his wife, LW's obligation there is to help Ella leave if Ella asks for help. It doesn't go any farther than that. LW certainly should not be ditching her friend for the sake of a sister who doesn't seem to care enough to meet her halfway, and who is willing to cut her off over something that doesn't concern Ella at all. The fact that Ella is a hardcore, outspoken bigot, and that this issue is an outgrowth of that makes it even more clear.