T.C. asks from Brandon, FL on June 13, 2008
My Brothers Moved In
not by my choice either. My mother decided to stop by yesterday and "bring" him over. We had no idea she was doing this and at that moment I was in a possition with him there that I couldnt say no. I love my brother and this isnt about him, its about my mother. I spoke to her on the phone many times about this while I listened to her beg me to take him in. I told her then that I couldnt afford it, I have to take care of my own family first. My brother had lived here about a month before, and I told her then that I couldnt afford it, and he stayed here for a month and she offered me not one single penny to pay for his food. He is 18, 17 at the time he moved in, and while she is spending his child support money on herself, I am bussy being his mentor, helping him graduate school, get his lisence, open his first bank account and get a job. At the same time I am trying to help support my own family and spend time with my son and husband. Like I said I love my brother and its not his fault that our mother is being a selfish pig, but what makes me so mad about all of this is that she has manipulated me yet again to get what she wanted for herself. I am not sure if I should call her and tell her to come and get him because rightfully he is her responsibility, not mine. But there is a big part of me that knows it would hurt him to think I didnt want him here. She has done things like this to me all of my life, so its nothing new, but I am sick of taking care of her problems and her responsibilities. Any advice on what I should do? I honestly cant afford to take care of another mouth, even though I am going back to work, I just dont know if its going to put my family into more of a finacial dept then we are already in. Plus, its my brother and I know she wont help him. I am torn being a rock and a hard place and dont know which way to go with this...
So What Happened?™
I forgot to add that he is joining the army in a few months, so in the mean time he is in fact looking for a job as we speak. I have spoken to my mother about how I feel about everything, my whole entire life being responsible for my two brothers and her oppinion on all of this is that she did her "part" and I am basically just the daughter she likes to use to get out of doing the real work of taking care of her children. My brothers have called me there mom since I was 8/9 years old, so this isnt anything new. I am just at a point in my life right now where I feel like I dont need her anymore to keep holding me back from where I want to be with my family. Its sad really. I do thank everyone for all of the advice and I hope she doesnt do this again with my younger brother who right now is only 15...
More Answers
L.R. answers from Tampa on June 14, 2008
I would call my mom and tell her to come get my brother or send me the child support check and you don't want to hear any excuses. If she refuses to do either tell her you will call child protective services on her for child neglect.
V. answers from Tampa on June 16, 2008
Since your brother is officially an adult now, perhaps you can encourage him to find a roommate & get his own place. If not, then he should certainly get a job & pay his way at your home.
S.S. answers from Tampa on June 16, 2008
Take care of your brother because in your heart, you want to do the right thing and it's not his fault. Since he's 18, he can earn his keep and pay a portion of food/rent/expenses toward your household budget. It's just got to be. Money only goes so far, especially these days. Explain to him he's got to help out and pretty soon, he'll be expected to get his own apartment. Let him know this is not a free ride. Everyone pulls their own weight. Assign him some chores, too. If he's under your roof, he should be pitching in, helping with the baby, laundry, dishes, etc. You won't want to make him feel like a guest because if it's too cushy, he'll never leave.
As far as your mother is concerned, she sounds like a toxic person. I'd stay as far away as you can. Put your foot down. If she wants to create chaos and foolishness, you let her know she won't be doing it around you. Stand firm and be strong. I know she's your mother (believe me, I've got one, too) but you and your family have to come first. Until I did this with my mother, I was running on a constant hamster wheel for other people and it doesn't matter how fast you run, you're still getting nowhere.
Good luck. You can do it! If you posted here, you're already a smart cookie.
L.N. answers from Tampa on June 15, 2008
If your mother does not want him and you can not help him talk to HIM not your mother, tell him you can not have him there anymore and ask him to get a job and find a place to live. You have your own family and that comes first, in truth he is not your responsibility and he is old enough to fend for himself. Offer emotional support and that he is welcome to hang out with you and your family and that you still love him, that he is not the problem but the finances do not allow you to do this
It is better to have one red moment than a 100 yellow ones. And if you do not tell him this you may grow to resent him and things could get ugly and might slip something hurtful that you won't be able to take back. Plus having a stressful situation could also hurt your marriage and even stress out your child.
H.S. answers from Tampa on June 16, 2008
I am sorry for what you are going through. That being said, your brother is 18? If he wants to live with you then set some boundaries. He gets a job and helps out. Then call and inform your mother that she will immediatly turn over all support checks to you or you will be informing her ex and the state that her son is no longer under her household and she is fraudulently accepting and spending money that is rightfully his. Then, and here's the biggie, follow through!! If you don't want to be walked on get up off the floor. It sounds harsh but someone told me that long ago and it helps. It helps you to understand that you don't have to be a victim you can stand up and set normal healthy boundaries. It doesn't make you a bad sister it makes you a good person and your son will learn positive ways to deal with un-healthy people from you. So go girl you can do it!
H.
34 yr old mom to 2 gorgeous boys 7 and 7 mos old.
M.J. answers from Sarasota on June 16, 2008
Is it possible for your brother to get a job (even part time) and contribute so much a week to the household? That would offset the cost of having him there, and he could do chores or even babysit to help out additionally. I totally understand your dilemma, but turning out your brother will send a message about family being devalued to your young son, who has a great chance to bond and grow with his uncle. I would simply sever ties with your mother until she can prove that she is capable of responsibility. Also, you may consider reporting her to the family court for misappropriating child support funds and not caring for her son. Good luck!!
K.T. answers from Tampa on June 13, 2008
Your brother is definately old enought to get a job and tell him he has to help with the expenses if he is going to be there. He is not a little boy anymore -he is a young man. Let him live with you if he helps out with the expenses.
Have you told your mom your side?? Maybe you need to sit her down and tell her that you dont have the money to support him and either she does or he will have to go to work! (which is not a bad thing either.) He should be able to pay for his clothes and give you something to help out with the expenses.
L.F. answers from Tampa on June 14, 2008
Wow, that's a hard one! How does your brother feel about this? Does he know? This must be pretty hurful to him, not being wanted anywhere. So first, I guess I'd say try not to let him know about all that. Secondly, if he's 18, he's his own responsibilitly - not yours or your mom's, technically. Leaving your mom out of it, because there's obviously a lot of issues between you, I recommend having a heart to heart with your brother (in a kind, sensitive way) about him getting his own place now and finding a roommate. Explain that you love him very much and that it will better for him to be on his own now. Or, if he's not ready, develop a timeline for when he can and how he'll do it, you know?
Good luck!
take care,
L.
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