I have a problem that I’m sure many of you have heard about time and time again from someone you know, but I need to get it off my chest a bit. I have a family member who is perpetually mooching off of other family members.
The family member in question is my older sister and my only sibling. She just turned 30 and I am 27.
The reason it is a problem now is because it has reached a crisis-level: all family members (as of this week) have cut her off because they can barely afford their own necessities, and she is now on her own for the first time ever. The situation has affected our family dynamic for years and I’m at my wits end, but worried for her future.
My sister has been dubbed the “problem child” since age 15 when my parent divorced. While I’m not a saint, I have no criminal record, did well in school and have not asked my parents for money since I graduated high school (not that they haven’t helped). My sister had some run-ins with the law (shoplifting, pot, domestic dispute with my stepmother) in her late teens, but relatively cleaned up her act in college to become a social worker. However, social workers don’t make enough money to support her choice of lifestyle (designer clothes and purses, expensive vacations and eating out every night), which she likely picked up from my parent’s lifestyle before their divorce. Also, she always has some crisis (car wreck, threating calls from collection agencies, or a job loss) where she calls up my family and they give her money. She’s bailed out, no lesson learned. I have never given my sister money and she has never asked for money (out of pride, I suspect).
Growing up, my sister and I had the usual sibling rivalry of competing for our parents’ attention, but since I moved away from my hometown after college, I’ve given up the act and she hasn’t. But now she’s started taking things to an extreme. Since I got married last year, she won’t return my phone calls or try to contact me. She complains about my life being “disgustingly perfect” and attributes any good fortune of mine to my “perfect husband” or to “kissing my boss’s ass,” when really I work hard at a good job in my field and my husband and I manage our money well. Of course I don’t hear any of this from her. I hear it from my parents.
My father bailed my sister out quite a bit when she was younger, but my father—not being too savvy with finances himself—stopped directly giving her money when my sister flunked out of an expensive private university and defaulted on the student loan he got a friend to cosign (my father had declared bankruptcy a year or two before this; I said he's not finacially savvy). This mortally embarrassed him and ruined the friendship, and since then my father has taken on the burden of the loan (all $30k of it).
My mother—also financially crippled after the divorce and my father filing for bankruptcy shortly after—has been my sister’s primary provider the last 10 years. My mother empowered herself after the divorce with finance classes and she’s become quite knowledgeable, but she’s barely been able to save for her own retirement because my sister continues to struggle. My grandmother has also been backing my mother to pay my sister, which took the situation to a level I could not ignore about 3 years back when my sister moved in an unemployed, alcoholic boyfriend and I verbally laid into my sister about what a financial burden she is to the family.
Things got better between us when I got engaged and made her my maid of honor. We talked frequently about wedding plans and we had great bonding experience over the wedding. My sister is unmarried though, and often lamented that she should have been celebrating her own wedding. After the wedding was over, my sister hit many pitfalls while I have done well.
She was accused of having an inappropriate relationship with one of her clients (a high school student) and was fired for it. She has denied any sexual relationship, but freely admits that she made friends with the boy’s mother and younger siblings, hangs out at their house frequently and even sleeps over there when the mother is not there (claiming she babysits the younger siblings). She found employment , but was fired after two days, presuming the rumor was discovered. She was unemployed for six months and supported by my grandmother during that time. She was hired again at another job, worked for less than two months, and then was fired for vague reasons.
After my sister was hired at the last job, an agreement was made between my mother and grandmother that they would no longer financially support my sister (mainly due to the 30th birthday and because my mother knew about the situation with the high school kid, but also because my mother and grandmother can no longer afford to). My sister asked my father for money earlier this week and he was actually about to help her until she revealed she actually owed the unemployment office $600 for not notifying them when she was hired the last time. So for the first time ever, she is on her own. This time presumably for good.
I am mostly venting here, but I’m also worried for my sister. I’m glad my parents finally stopped enabling her, but I’m worried what will happen now that she has no one to bail her out. I also wish I had a better relationship with my sister, but if she asks me for money, I will have to say no, and she may never forgive me or understand. Is there anyone out there with a similar situation? What would you do if you were in my shoes? She has never listened to any of my financial advice before, but I don't even know what I would tell her now.
The family member in question is my older sister and my only sibling. She just turned 30 and I am 27.
The reason it is a problem now is because it has reached a crisis-level: all family members (as of this week) have cut her off because they can barely afford their own necessities, and she is now on her own for the first time ever. The situation has affected our family dynamic for years and I’m at my wits end, but worried for her future.
My sister has been dubbed the “problem child” since age 15 when my parent divorced. While I’m not a saint, I have no criminal record, did well in school and have not asked my parents for money since I graduated high school (not that they haven’t helped). My sister had some run-ins with the law (shoplifting, pot, domestic dispute with my stepmother) in her late teens, but relatively cleaned up her act in college to become a social worker. However, social workers don’t make enough money to support her choice of lifestyle (designer clothes and purses, expensive vacations and eating out every night), which she likely picked up from my parent’s lifestyle before their divorce. Also, she always has some crisis (car wreck, threating calls from collection agencies, or a job loss) where she calls up my family and they give her money. She’s bailed out, no lesson learned. I have never given my sister money and she has never asked for money (out of pride, I suspect).
Growing up, my sister and I had the usual sibling rivalry of competing for our parents’ attention, but since I moved away from my hometown after college, I’ve given up the act and she hasn’t. But now she’s started taking things to an extreme. Since I got married last year, she won’t return my phone calls or try to contact me. She complains about my life being “disgustingly perfect” and attributes any good fortune of mine to my “perfect husband” or to “kissing my boss’s ass,” when really I work hard at a good job in my field and my husband and I manage our money well. Of course I don’t hear any of this from her. I hear it from my parents.
My father bailed my sister out quite a bit when she was younger, but my father—not being too savvy with finances himself—stopped directly giving her money when my sister flunked out of an expensive private university and defaulted on the student loan he got a friend to cosign (my father had declared bankruptcy a year or two before this; I said he's not finacially savvy). This mortally embarrassed him and ruined the friendship, and since then my father has taken on the burden of the loan (all $30k of it).
My mother—also financially crippled after the divorce and my father filing for bankruptcy shortly after—has been my sister’s primary provider the last 10 years. My mother empowered herself after the divorce with finance classes and she’s become quite knowledgeable, but she’s barely been able to save for her own retirement because my sister continues to struggle. My grandmother has also been backing my mother to pay my sister, which took the situation to a level I could not ignore about 3 years back when my sister moved in an unemployed, alcoholic boyfriend and I verbally laid into my sister about what a financial burden she is to the family.
Things got better between us when I got engaged and made her my maid of honor. We talked frequently about wedding plans and we had great bonding experience over the wedding. My sister is unmarried though, and often lamented that she should have been celebrating her own wedding. After the wedding was over, my sister hit many pitfalls while I have done well.
She was accused of having an inappropriate relationship with one of her clients (a high school student) and was fired for it. She has denied any sexual relationship, but freely admits that she made friends with the boy’s mother and younger siblings, hangs out at their house frequently and even sleeps over there when the mother is not there (claiming she babysits the younger siblings). She found employment , but was fired after two days, presuming the rumor was discovered. She was unemployed for six months and supported by my grandmother during that time. She was hired again at another job, worked for less than two months, and then was fired for vague reasons.
After my sister was hired at the last job, an agreement was made between my mother and grandmother that they would no longer financially support my sister (mainly due to the 30th birthday and because my mother knew about the situation with the high school kid, but also because my mother and grandmother can no longer afford to). My sister asked my father for money earlier this week and he was actually about to help her until she revealed she actually owed the unemployment office $600 for not notifying them when she was hired the last time. So for the first time ever, she is on her own. This time presumably for good.
I am mostly venting here, but I’m also worried for my sister. I’m glad my parents finally stopped enabling her, but I’m worried what will happen now that she has no one to bail her out. I also wish I had a better relationship with my sister, but if she asks me for money, I will have to say no, and she may never forgive me or understand. Is there anyone out there with a similar situation? What would you do if you were in my shoes? She has never listened to any of my financial advice before, but I don't even know what I would tell her now.
Comment