Two letters about much younger siblings, from two perspectives
1. DEAR HARRIETTE: I have a sister who is 20 years younger than I am. I’m 30, and she’s only 10 years old. Because of this huge age gap, we’ve never really had a chance to bond or develop a close relationship. While I love her dearly, every time it’s just the two of us, the conversation feels forced and awkward. I don't think either of us is necessarily to blame. She's so much younger, and we’re at completely different stages in life, but it leaves me feeling sad and disconnected.
I go to visit her and my parents often so that we have plenty of opportunities to become closer, but sometimes I wonder if I’ll ever have the kind of sibling bond I’ve seen other people enjoy with their brothers or sisters. I want to find ways to relate to her better and make her feel comfortable around me, but I don’t know where to start. She’s my only sibling, and the thought of us not being close upsets me. How can I help us become closer in our relationship so that we have a stronger bond in the future? -- Sibling Disconnect
DEAR SIBLING DISCONNECT: Your sister is a child, and you do not live together, so you will not have much in common now. Don’t look for that. Instead, be with her when you are together. Listen to her. Invite her to share her world with you. Find out what interests her. Try to remember what you cared about at her age. Share appropriate connecting stories as you remember them.
Expose her to your world. What do you like to do that might interest her? Arts activities, music, books? Show her who you are as she does the same for you. Allow your relationship to grow naturally. She may seem more like a daughter or niece than a sister for a few years, but that’s fine too.
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2. DEAR HARRIETTE: I’ve been an aunt since I was 9 years old. I am 29 now, the youngest of five sisters and an aunt to 11 nieces and nephews. For as long as I can remember, I’ve been the default babysitter. I live at home with my mom, which seems to be a prime location for all of my sisters when they need parental relief. Sometimes they show up unannounced or with short notice and simply tell me they need someone to watch their children for a few hours -- or sometimes overnight. I think because I do not currently have a partner or children, they assume I am always home or available. If I tell them otherwise, they ask if my social engagements are as important as my nieces or nephews. I don’t like that they always expect me to cancel plans at their behest, but I’m not allowed to expect them to plan ahead.
Lately, I’ve been saying no more often. Even when I am free, I’d prefer to be alone. I’ve noticed that sometimes they plan outings without me and say, “we thought you wanted to be alone.” I’ve tried explaining to them, for years now, that all my free time being dedicated to child care is overwhelming -- especially when I am not yet an actual mother -- but they tell me I’m insensitive and say I’ll understand how they feel when my time comes. I think this dynamic has pushed me to be defensive with my siblings and not as joyous with my nieces and nephews. I want all these relationships to be more amicable, and I want my sisters to understand my boundaries. How do I get them to see my side? -- Tired Auntie
DEAR TIRED AUNTIE: Speak to your siblings. Remind them how much you love them and their children, but point out that you have your own life. Explain that as much as you like to help them -- sometimes -- you do not appreciate their assumption that you are always on call to care for their children. Ask them to take a more respectful approach this year, where they inquire about your availability and schedule child care ahead of time rather than treating you like their on-call sitter.
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I go to visit her and my parents often so that we have plenty of opportunities to become closer, but sometimes I wonder if I’ll ever have the kind of sibling bond I’ve seen other people enjoy with their brothers or sisters. I want to find ways to relate to her better and make her feel comfortable around me, but I don’t know where to start. She’s my only sibling, and the thought of us not being close upsets me. How can I help us become closer in our relationship so that we have a stronger bond in the future? -- Sibling Disconnect
DEAR SIBLING DISCONNECT: Your sister is a child, and you do not live together, so you will not have much in common now. Don’t look for that. Instead, be with her when you are together. Listen to her. Invite her to share her world with you. Find out what interests her. Try to remember what you cared about at her age. Share appropriate connecting stories as you remember them.
Expose her to your world. What do you like to do that might interest her? Arts activities, music, books? Show her who you are as she does the same for you. Allow your relationship to grow naturally. She may seem more like a daughter or niece than a sister for a few years, but that’s fine too.
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2. DEAR HARRIETTE: I’ve been an aunt since I was 9 years old. I am 29 now, the youngest of five sisters and an aunt to 11 nieces and nephews. For as long as I can remember, I’ve been the default babysitter. I live at home with my mom, which seems to be a prime location for all of my sisters when they need parental relief. Sometimes they show up unannounced or with short notice and simply tell me they need someone to watch their children for a few hours -- or sometimes overnight. I think because I do not currently have a partner or children, they assume I am always home or available. If I tell them otherwise, they ask if my social engagements are as important as my nieces or nephews. I don’t like that they always expect me to cancel plans at their behest, but I’m not allowed to expect them to plan ahead.
Lately, I’ve been saying no more often. Even when I am free, I’d prefer to be alone. I’ve noticed that sometimes they plan outings without me and say, “we thought you wanted to be alone.” I’ve tried explaining to them, for years now, that all my free time being dedicated to child care is overwhelming -- especially when I am not yet an actual mother -- but they tell me I’m insensitive and say I’ll understand how they feel when my time comes. I think this dynamic has pushed me to be defensive with my siblings and not as joyous with my nieces and nephews. I want all these relationships to be more amicable, and I want my sisters to understand my boundaries. How do I get them to see my side? -- Tired Auntie
DEAR TIRED AUNTIE: Speak to your siblings. Remind them how much you love them and their children, but point out that you have your own life. Explain that as much as you like to help them -- sometimes -- you do not appreciate their assumption that you are always on call to care for their children. Ask them to take a more respectful approach this year, where they inquire about your availability and schedule child care ahead of time rather than treating you like their on-call sitter.
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Well, it's not too late to start asking to take Sister out to do things together that they should both find fun - a trip to the movies, a museum, camping, or even just board games at home.
2. Harriette's advice is useless.
The problem is that LW is hung up on getting her sisters to understand her. That's garbage and will never happen. All they need to understand is that she's not going to be their last minute babysitter anymore unless everybody else is literally in the hospital or prison.
LW ideally needs to move away from home with no forwarding address. If that's not possible, she needs to spend as little time at home as possible. "Can't babysit, I'm five hours away - and yes, this is more important than your children!" is not something that the siblings can argue with.
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She can't make them see her side. They are happy with the current arrangement and berate her for daring to have a life.
She just needs to decide her own rules for babysitting and impose them. These siblings will never see her side and will probably go to their graves thinking she is selfish.
Yuck.
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(This applies to LW's mom too. If Mom wants to babysit, that's her prerogative, but LW must not get involved if she doesn't want to babysit.)
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Realistically, you are never going to have the kind of sibling relationship you want with your little sister, and that's okay! You're in completely different stages of life right now and you likely always will be. You didn't grow up together, it's entirely possible that you never even really lived together for more than a couple months during summer break or immediate post-grad. And she's not going to remember those times anyway. In terms of relationship, you're probably more along the vein of a young aunt/uncle - so why not try to go with that? Find something you can do together once a month - go bowling, have lunch at a diner, check out a children's museum, etc. Make yourself available as a Trusted Adult that she can come to with questions or problems. You don't mention if there are any other siblings in between you, but if there are, see if you can make use of those stepping stones to bridge the age gap.
As she gets older, you may have an easier time finding things to bond over. For example, my mother is 14 years younger than her oldest sister, but they both worked in healthcare and they were the only siblings who had children. In my generation of the family, my cousins are 21 and 24 years older than my youngest sister; we would do a group cousin outing a couple times a year, whether it was bowling, seeing a movie, getting dinner, or even having a game night.
You and your little sister will very likely never feel like peers, but you can try to meet halfway to still have some kind of relationship.
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When you're in your seventies and she's in her fifties you may actually get something closer to a sisters relationship. But don't let what you want it to be now spoil what it could become later - until she's also an established adult who feels secure in her own place (so, at least another twenty years) you won't be able to have a relationship of peers, and that's okay.
LW #2 - "I’ve noticed that sometimes they plan outings without me and say, “we thought you wanted to be alone.”" Holy passive aggression, Batman.
Step one, LW, is probably move out of your parents' house, which isn't something I'd always recommend, but you need to not be dependent on keeping things in harmony with these people.
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The petty, burn-bridges part of me thinks LW should a) tell them she's not available and so if they leave the kids with her she'll call CPS for child abandonment, and/or b) at the end of each forced visit, give the kids take-home goodie bags with glitter and plastic recorders...
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One of the things we've talked about as adults is how different the houses we grew up in were - starting with state, but also economic security and the way our parents were in the larger community. (Our father was a professor, my siblings were born before he was tenured, I was born after he'd not only had tenure for about 15 years, but had been chair of the department multiple times).
He was able to be a lot more present in my day to day life in some ways because of it (he could set a schedule that meant he was able to be the one picking me up at school a lot - he'd then do more work while I was doing homework or in bed.)
But also, differences in parenting, because by the time I got them, our parents had an idea what they were doing, what they wanted to prioritise in various ways, and all that.
Just. What I got was really different (and, um, my parents also made some things much easier for me than it was for them.) On the complicated side, our father died when I was 15, and whoo boy is that whole lot of difference, because I never got to know him when I was an adult and they did.
What's fascinating to us is that all three of us went through similar phases as adults in terms of particular interests (we *all* had a breadbaking phase which has never quite stopped, though I started earlier in my life than they did.) We've all had bits of very similar crafting interest. We all read different corners of genre fiction, but with enough overlap to enjoy conversations.
Anyway, my advice to the sister here is to figure out a way to keep the connection open independent from their parents whether that's some sort of fun correspondence, a distance-friendly game night, or just plain being curious. Little sister's not going to be a companion-type friend for a while, but maybe in 15 years, she'll be able to offer great advice about something she knows well that you don't. (Maybe sooner.)
(My sister calling me up a couple of years ago for some personal advice completely blew my mind, but she was very "Look, you're an adult, you're sensible about this thing, why wouldn't I ask you?")
And on an entirely practical level, the thing about seeing different sides of parents can be really handy when you start thinking about elder care or how to handle specific issues. (My siblings and I figured out when I was a relatively young adult that our mother was telling us all different pieces of some things, and we have now learned to share information routinely about the relevant topics.)
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2. "Understanding" is not going to develop here, I reckon. This sucks though because the well-being of small children is being pretty much dumped on the unsuspecting OP. Lacking other options, I'd consider finding refuges outside of home and taking up partial residence there - a favorite cafe, the library.
Otherwise perhaps start teaching the children swears? (not serious... unless...........)
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