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I can't cope with depressed brother being so reliant on me. Feel like a bitch for saying that.

789 replies

inigomontoyahwillcox · 02/12/2024 05:47

I'm so sorry - this going to be so long - but I need to get this out. I'm up with this awful cough/chest infection which makes it impossible to lie down and sleep. Been ill since last Tuesday. Have had virtually no sleep since then. Pretty sure a lot of you will think I'm a heartless cow, but I'm getting to my wits end.

Context. My brother (quite significantly older than me) has suffered from depression since he was a teen. He has been on antidepressants since then, except for a couple of occasions when he's taken himself off them for one reason or another, which have ended up in disaster. He lives about 2.5 hours away from me.

For some years now he has been spending more and more time at my house with my DH, DD and I. He lives alone and came to stay with us during lock down, and has often come to stay with us, sometimes for weeks, off and on since then when he's feeling low or had a crappy couple of weeks (e.g. work stress). I've always said to him of course he can come, how can I not, but he's often then stayed and stayed, prolonging his stay without discussing it with me - just declaring he's not going to go home for another week at the end of his planned stay.

He has a fantastic job in the civil service, but has had lot and lots of absences for various ailments over the past couple of years and they are understandably getting serious about his attendance. He seems to think this is very unfair and how they just don't understand. I've tried gently - but seriously - to explain that you can indeed be dismissed for repeated or lengthy absences.

In May this year he started getting some odd physical symptoms - balance issues/vertigo mainly (other very vague things like feeling cold, and out of it) - I rushed down there to him when this initially happened as he took himself to hospital thinking he was having a stroke. Ultimately anything serious was ruled out and after taking him to a few appointments for some further checks I drove him back to mine to stay. He decided that these symptoms were due to his antidepressant (that he'd been on for 15 years), so agreed with his GP to reduce his dose to an incredibly small one (questionable that it was even therapeutic anymore - it was 1/4 of the starting dose, he had been on double the starting dose for 15 years). His physical symptoms did clear up eventually - he put this down to this reduction in his antidepressants - I wasn't so convinced. I also voiced my concern that he was now effectively not on antidepressants and we all know how that had ended up in the past and that he needed to push to try another antidepressant if he didn't want to go back to his old one.

He eventually went back home and to work, and was there for a few months until he started experiencing stomach issues, now diagnosed as IBS (which I know is not fun - I've had it for years myself) and yet again took himself off work. He was working with his GP and a dietician and put on the FODMAP diet which he's still on. Again, he came to ours for a few weeks. His work were getting very ancy by this time and he started to do some hours remotely from ours as he had no choice. Eventually he went home again, he was home for a week only then for his depression to increase so I told him to get an emergency appointment with his GP who told him to double his dose last week. Well all hell broke loose (assuming side effects of increasing the dose). I've been ill for a couple of months now with all these bloody relentless viruses (also been very anemic for a lot longer and recently had a couple of infusions and currently undergoing tests to find out why - so you can imagine how rough I've been feeling), but last Tuesday I came down with proper flu (raging temp etc.) and have been in bed since and have been mainly off work (doing work when needed from bed). I never take time off work, honestly have to be at deaths door - have subsequently developed a chest infection and am on antibiotics. Got a call from my brother at 5:30am on Wednesday with him feeling awful saying I needed to drive down and collect him, after explaining I couldn't as I was ill asked to speak to DH and asked him to go. I said to DH that he couldn't, he had work plus he was helping me out with a work event in the evening which I obviously couldn't attend any more but he still needed to arrange some stuff and be there for a short while. I put my foot down and said he had to either drive, get the train or wait until we could drive to him and if he was in crisis to call his local crisis team immediately. He eventually said he would drive as he couldn't fit all the stuff he wanted to bring in a backpack so the train was out (so he'd get obviously decided at that point he was coming for a while).

Since he's been with us he has been waking me up every morning at silly-o'clock (e.g. 5-6), as he's been experiencing massive anxiety. I've been woken up three times now to him standing in our bedroom crying and saying he can't cope. I am getting about 2 hours of sleep per night due to this chest infection anyway, and have usually only just dropped off when he's waking me up. At this rate I'm never going to get better. DH had to stop him coming into our bedroom the other day when I had eventually managed to doze off. Anyway, called the local out of hours crisis team yesterday morning and sat with him whilst he spoke to them, they're seeing him this morning and have told him to register as a temporary patient at my local GP and they are hopefully going to make a plan going forward - e.g. moving to a new antidepressant (I hope). On the phone he said to them he was going to stay with me indefinitely (no discussion with me) and can't see himself doing his job for some months.

In the past when he's had a crisis like this he's decamped to our parents who look after him for months whilst he recovers and he finds a new job - but he's decided that he finds it too stressful to stay with them (they're getting on now as well). I can see what is going to happen. He is going to loose his job, loose his rented flat as a result and have nowhere to live but here with us. So, unemployed, living with us indefinitely. And what choice do I have?

It's really stressful when he stays with us - just the whole dynamic/routine of the household goes out the window. He has always been single and as a result his life revolves around himself, he spreads himself and his things around the house, and changes/moves/breaks thing (little things, but they all add up) and gets argumentative when I ask him not to do something. My home just doesn't feel like my home anymore; I can't spend evenings chilling out lying on the sofa in front of the telly with DH, as we often do, he's often lying on the sofa watching TV himself, he smokes although takes himself outside but his clothes smell of smoke. He is in our small spare room (well, he's on the sofa tonight for some reason) which we had just recently decked out as DD's study as her bedroom isn't really big enough for a desk; she's finishing her mocks tomorrow and has her GCSEs in May - she has ADHD and it's been incredibly challenging for her academically, but we'd really turned a corner recently and she's determined to get into 6th form, I'm so worried all of this is going to upheave her, stress her out and affect her performance; she's been so proud of her achievements recently and I think if she does badly now what little confidence she'd recently gained will disappear.

I am pretty sure a straw will break the camel's back and I will end up loosing it with him at some point, or just getting incredibly stressed and ill (stress usually manifests itself physically with me as I just try to ignore it and push on through - I've had my own mental health battles). But how can I effectively abandon my depressed brother? I love him dearly, and want him to be well, but he's come to rely on me so heavily that it's becoming too much. He's really not helped himself; taking so much time off work for spurious reasons and now he really needs the time off they are challenging him and his job is in jeopardy; him not taking my advice about not going cold turkey on the antidepressants without a plan to start a new one; just the assumption that we can constantly put our lives on hold. DH is being incredibly understanding - but I can even see him getting frustrated by my brother over the past few months. DH also had a huge mental breakdown last year and attempted suicide twice, he's only just got back on some sort of even keel about 6 months ago but is still recovering. Jesus, what if HE ends up breaking down again and then I've got 2 men in crisis to look after?! I've got my own full time stressful job to do as well, plus a neurodivergent daughter to keep on track. I'm terrified! I honestly don't know what to do for the best. He has very good friends but they don't live in the same city as him, but other than them and my parents, we're all he has.

What the fuck do I do?

OP posts:
StartupRepair · 10/12/2024 19:59

That's a really great update
Hope you are starting to feel a bit rested yourself. Make sure you are not included as any part of his future plans. There may be a narrative that he said those things 'while he was ill' but is safe to be with now. This will be convenient for your parents to believe. Stay right away and make sure your parents know why. This is the opportunity to break some lifetime habits.

pooperscoops · 10/12/2024 20:11

Thats an excellent outcome all round. Your brother will benefit from that wrap-around caring environment.

I hope you can now take a breath and focus on yourself. You have been through so much spinning plates with (at least) three members of your family coping with ND and extreme MH crisis. This will have taken its toll on you although you might not have felt it yet. Please prioritise yourself for many months to come.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 10/12/2024 20:21

Thank you. I feel so much calmer and relaxed now. DH, DD and I had our first meal all sitting around the table together (as we religiously do under normal circumstances) tonight in two weeks. Such a simple thing but it made me so happy.

I'm going to get Christmas and New Year out of the way and the put some things into place to give myself some attention - I don't know what this might be, but therapy of some sort is at the top of the list.

OP posts:

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SheilaFentiman · 10/12/2024 20:22

inigomontoyahwillcox · 10/12/2024 20:21

Thank you. I feel so much calmer and relaxed now. DH, DD and I had our first meal all sitting around the table together (as we religiously do under normal circumstances) tonight in two weeks. Such a simple thing but it made me so happy.

I'm going to get Christmas and New Year out of the way and the put some things into place to give myself some attention - I don't know what this might be, but therapy of some sort is at the top of the list.

That’s lovely OP

Pompeyssy · 10/12/2024 20:31

Great update.
Let 2025 be about your immediate family healing together.
Wishing you well.

Patienceinshortsupply · 10/12/2024 20:34

You sound in a much better place already, OP. Stay strong, don't weaken and hopefully you can all find a way forward to co-exist as a family but with your own very strong and healthy boundaries.

Mummyoflittledragon · 10/12/2024 20:48

Thank your for updating on your brother’s situation. That sounds like a positive step and I hope he can engage in the activities and therapy.

Have a great Christmas and yes some therapy would be a great idea!

AlbertCamusflage · 10/12/2024 21:07

That sounds great OP. He will soon be in a suitable place and it marks a complete break with the old routine of relying on you to provide him with crisis accommodation.

Now you aren't swimming against the tide; you are swimming with a new tide. I'm sure there will be times when he isn't happy with where he is and will push at your boundaries. But you have your new normal now and you can say, 'no, this isn't how we do things anymore'.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 10/12/2024 21:14

AlbertCamusflage · 10/12/2024 21:07

That sounds great OP. He will soon be in a suitable place and it marks a complete break with the old routine of relying on you to provide him with crisis accommodation.

Now you aren't swimming against the tide; you are swimming with a new tide. I'm sure there will be times when he isn't happy with where he is and will push at your boundaries. But you have your new normal now and you can say, 'no, this isn't how we do things anymore'.

'no, this isn't how we do things anymore'

My new mantra 😁

OP posts:
Eddielizzard · 11/12/2024 09:11

What a turnaround. That must have been so hard for you, but he's now getting the help he needs and not leaning on you so heavily. I'm sure there will be tough times still, but you are no longer the default carer. That is such a big step. Enjoy this lovely family time.

Orangesandlemons77 · 11/12/2024 10:11

It's good that there is a plan for some more support closer to his home, takes the pressure off you as well.

Autumnleaveswhenthegrassisjewelled · 19/12/2024 13:51

Hey OP just wondering how you are? :)

inigomontoyahwillcox · 19/12/2024 22:12

Autumnleaveswhenthegrassisjewelled · 19/12/2024 13:51

Hey OP just wondering how you are? :)

Hi @Autumnleaveswhenthegrassisjewelled. That's really lovely of you to check in on me.

Brother is still down at the crisis centre - he seems to be getting on very well. Doing lots of activities, going out with staff, they even had a party yesterday! He's staying in over Xmas and they're making a plan to get him back to his flat with support.

I am still reeling a bit. But I've not had time to really sit down and take stock as work is absolutely manic at the moment (I run our district's food bank). I'm booking my own breakdown in for the new year 😆. I've had to field calls from social services to me and DD's school. Very glad they're doing their job and safeguarding DD, but just another thing to deal with and kinda made me feel that I should have got him out sooner (i.e. before he said anything about violence) - they didn't say that, just how the conversation made me feel.

But in better news, it's just DH, DD and I for Christmas - so a nice quiet one (feel like I'm tempting fate by even saying that!).

OP posts:
SheilaFentiman · 20/12/2024 04:57

Op, you are amazing. It’s been difficult and horrible but you have got to a good place and this is the right thing for DBro too.

OhBeAFineGuyKissMe · 20/12/2024 07:55

It is very telling that you answer the question how are you by talking about your brother first. Then you and your family.

He is not your first priority and you need to stop thinking he is. He is not your problem to solve any more and you don’t need to be so involved to know the ins and outs of his daily care.

DoughnutDonna · 20/12/2024 08:30

very telling that you answer the question how are you by talking about your brother first

I'm glad I'm not the only one to spot that! Op. YOU and DH and DD are your priority. Anything leftover, you can choose to give other people or not. And that's ok.

SheilaFentiman · 20/12/2024 08:59

I dunno - given Op started the thread about her brother, not too surprised that is the first update. But I totally agree she and DH and Dd are the priority

Autumnleaveswhenthegrassisjewelled · 20/12/2024 11:20

inigomontoyahwillcox · 19/12/2024 22:12

Hi @Autumnleaveswhenthegrassisjewelled. That's really lovely of you to check in on me.

Brother is still down at the crisis centre - he seems to be getting on very well. Doing lots of activities, going out with staff, they even had a party yesterday! He's staying in over Xmas and they're making a plan to get him back to his flat with support.

I am still reeling a bit. But I've not had time to really sit down and take stock as work is absolutely manic at the moment (I run our district's food bank). I'm booking my own breakdown in for the new year 😆. I've had to field calls from social services to me and DD's school. Very glad they're doing their job and safeguarding DD, but just another thing to deal with and kinda made me feel that I should have got him out sooner (i.e. before he said anything about violence) - they didn't say that, just how the conversation made me feel.

But in better news, it's just DH, DD and I for Christmas - so a nice quiet one (feel like I'm tempting fate by even saying that!).

Awwwww that's okay. As a fellow chronic people pleaser and someone who is nice enough for people to trample on my kindness, I really felt for you and you've been on my mind a lot.

I'm glad he's out of your physical space. Sounds like the next step is to get some space back in your mind for yourself :) I'm glad you've managed to get the situation under control and are keeping it that way. Wishing you and your little family the best Christmas and most relaxing new year.

Please keep us updated on you!

theallotmentqueen · 20/12/2024 11:35

inigomontoyahwillcox · 02/12/2024 05:47

I'm so sorry - this going to be so long - but I need to get this out. I'm up with this awful cough/chest infection which makes it impossible to lie down and sleep. Been ill since last Tuesday. Have had virtually no sleep since then. Pretty sure a lot of you will think I'm a heartless cow, but I'm getting to my wits end.

Context. My brother (quite significantly older than me) has suffered from depression since he was a teen. He has been on antidepressants since then, except for a couple of occasions when he's taken himself off them for one reason or another, which have ended up in disaster. He lives about 2.5 hours away from me.

For some years now he has been spending more and more time at my house with my DH, DD and I. He lives alone and came to stay with us during lock down, and has often come to stay with us, sometimes for weeks, off and on since then when he's feeling low or had a crappy couple of weeks (e.g. work stress). I've always said to him of course he can come, how can I not, but he's often then stayed and stayed, prolonging his stay without discussing it with me - just declaring he's not going to go home for another week at the end of his planned stay.

He has a fantastic job in the civil service, but has had lot and lots of absences for various ailments over the past couple of years and they are understandably getting serious about his attendance. He seems to think this is very unfair and how they just don't understand. I've tried gently - but seriously - to explain that you can indeed be dismissed for repeated or lengthy absences.

In May this year he started getting some odd physical symptoms - balance issues/vertigo mainly (other very vague things like feeling cold, and out of it) - I rushed down there to him when this initially happened as he took himself to hospital thinking he was having a stroke. Ultimately anything serious was ruled out and after taking him to a few appointments for some further checks I drove him back to mine to stay. He decided that these symptoms were due to his antidepressant (that he'd been on for 15 years), so agreed with his GP to reduce his dose to an incredibly small one (questionable that it was even therapeutic anymore - it was 1/4 of the starting dose, he had been on double the starting dose for 15 years). His physical symptoms did clear up eventually - he put this down to this reduction in his antidepressants - I wasn't so convinced. I also voiced my concern that he was now effectively not on antidepressants and we all know how that had ended up in the past and that he needed to push to try another antidepressant if he didn't want to go back to his old one.

He eventually went back home and to work, and was there for a few months until he started experiencing stomach issues, now diagnosed as IBS (which I know is not fun - I've had it for years myself) and yet again took himself off work. He was working with his GP and a dietician and put on the FODMAP diet which he's still on. Again, he came to ours for a few weeks. His work were getting very ancy by this time and he started to do some hours remotely from ours as he had no choice. Eventually he went home again, he was home for a week only then for his depression to increase so I told him to get an emergency appointment with his GP who told him to double his dose last week. Well all hell broke loose (assuming side effects of increasing the dose). I've been ill for a couple of months now with all these bloody relentless viruses (also been very anemic for a lot longer and recently had a couple of infusions and currently undergoing tests to find out why - so you can imagine how rough I've been feeling), but last Tuesday I came down with proper flu (raging temp etc.) and have been in bed since and have been mainly off work (doing work when needed from bed). I never take time off work, honestly have to be at deaths door - have subsequently developed a chest infection and am on antibiotics. Got a call from my brother at 5:30am on Wednesday with him feeling awful saying I needed to drive down and collect him, after explaining I couldn't as I was ill asked to speak to DH and asked him to go. I said to DH that he couldn't, he had work plus he was helping me out with a work event in the evening which I obviously couldn't attend any more but he still needed to arrange some stuff and be there for a short while. I put my foot down and said he had to either drive, get the train or wait until we could drive to him and if he was in crisis to call his local crisis team immediately. He eventually said he would drive as he couldn't fit all the stuff he wanted to bring in a backpack so the train was out (so he'd get obviously decided at that point he was coming for a while).

Since he's been with us he has been waking me up every morning at silly-o'clock (e.g. 5-6), as he's been experiencing massive anxiety. I've been woken up three times now to him standing in our bedroom crying and saying he can't cope. I am getting about 2 hours of sleep per night due to this chest infection anyway, and have usually only just dropped off when he's waking me up. At this rate I'm never going to get better. DH had to stop him coming into our bedroom the other day when I had eventually managed to doze off. Anyway, called the local out of hours crisis team yesterday morning and sat with him whilst he spoke to them, they're seeing him this morning and have told him to register as a temporary patient at my local GP and they are hopefully going to make a plan going forward - e.g. moving to a new antidepressant (I hope). On the phone he said to them he was going to stay with me indefinitely (no discussion with me) and can't see himself doing his job for some months.

In the past when he's had a crisis like this he's decamped to our parents who look after him for months whilst he recovers and he finds a new job - but he's decided that he finds it too stressful to stay with them (they're getting on now as well). I can see what is going to happen. He is going to loose his job, loose his rented flat as a result and have nowhere to live but here with us. So, unemployed, living with us indefinitely. And what choice do I have?

It's really stressful when he stays with us - just the whole dynamic/routine of the household goes out the window. He has always been single and as a result his life revolves around himself, he spreads himself and his things around the house, and changes/moves/breaks thing (little things, but they all add up) and gets argumentative when I ask him not to do something. My home just doesn't feel like my home anymore; I can't spend evenings chilling out lying on the sofa in front of the telly with DH, as we often do, he's often lying on the sofa watching TV himself, he smokes although takes himself outside but his clothes smell of smoke. He is in our small spare room (well, he's on the sofa tonight for some reason) which we had just recently decked out as DD's study as her bedroom isn't really big enough for a desk; she's finishing her mocks tomorrow and has her GCSEs in May - she has ADHD and it's been incredibly challenging for her academically, but we'd really turned a corner recently and she's determined to get into 6th form, I'm so worried all of this is going to upheave her, stress her out and affect her performance; she's been so proud of her achievements recently and I think if she does badly now what little confidence she'd recently gained will disappear.

I am pretty sure a straw will break the camel's back and I will end up loosing it with him at some point, or just getting incredibly stressed and ill (stress usually manifests itself physically with me as I just try to ignore it and push on through - I've had my own mental health battles). But how can I effectively abandon my depressed brother? I love him dearly, and want him to be well, but he's come to rely on me so heavily that it's becoming too much. He's really not helped himself; taking so much time off work for spurious reasons and now he really needs the time off they are challenging him and his job is in jeopardy; him not taking my advice about not going cold turkey on the antidepressants without a plan to start a new one; just the assumption that we can constantly put our lives on hold. DH is being incredibly understanding - but I can even see him getting frustrated by my brother over the past few months. DH also had a huge mental breakdown last year and attempted suicide twice, he's only just got back on some sort of even keel about 6 months ago but is still recovering. Jesus, what if HE ends up breaking down again and then I've got 2 men in crisis to look after?! I've got my own full time stressful job to do as well, plus a neurodivergent daughter to keep on track. I'm terrified! I honestly don't know what to do for the best. He has very good friends but they don't live in the same city as him, but other than them and my parents, we're all he has.

What the fuck do I do?

Speaking as someone who suffers with really bad anxiety, depression and OCD and used to have anorexia. I have definitely leaned on my family, but I have always known that healing comes from within. On my own, I have found and accessed therapy, I've done research into my conditions and found things to help me. It's harsh, but it sounds like your brother is trying to get you to be the one to heal him - and that's not possible. You can support him in his healing journey, but he has to be the one to do the work. It sounds like he hasn't made any steps to help himself, and that's a problem.

There's also the element of the give-and-take relationship - or rather, just give for you and take for him. I'm very close with my mum and sister, and they do really support me. But I also try to support them, even when I'm sick. The point is that you're both trying to help and support one another, because you both care about each other. It feels to me like your brother doesn't actually view your relationship as two human beings trying to help and support one another. It seems to me like he simply views you as a tool to help him, and that's the real problem here. The issue isn't the depression, it's the fact that he doesn't care about your wellbeing and expects you to drop everything for him.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 20/12/2024 13:56

@theallotmentqueen I'm so sorry you struggle with you MH, it sounds you have a healthy support network around you (healthy as in it's not all give or take) though.

Brother sent me a goals list he'd written with his therapist earlier (I asked to see if - wanted to check moving here or relying on me more wasn't on the list!). One very noticeable thing written on it was "I must take responsibility" in the context of seeking/receiving help and support. So some hope!

OP posts:
murasaki · 20/12/2024 14:34

inigomontoyahwillcox · 20/12/2024 13:56

@theallotmentqueen I'm so sorry you struggle with you MH, it sounds you have a healthy support network around you (healthy as in it's not all give or take) though.

Brother sent me a goals list he'd written with his therapist earlier (I asked to see if - wanted to check moving here or relying on me more wasn't on the list!). One very noticeable thing written on it was "I must take responsibility" in the context of seeking/receiving help and support. So some hope!

That sounds positive. I hope you have a lovely Christmas.

TheGander · 20/12/2024 17:05

Sounding really positive. I mentioned upthread my brother went to a mental rehab place a few weeks after being sectioned and it really helped, I think he is still feeling the benefits more than 6 months after discharge home. Have a great Christmas!

CatHole · 21/12/2024 09:29

I'd love to hear my brother use 'I' and 'responsibility' in the same phrase. It's a low bar that he has never managed so I'm very excited for you.

My bro is visiting mum for Xmas, which worked well last year after the death of my dad. He'd previously not bothered for 25 years.
My spidery senses are slightly tingling because we know he's been calling in sick to work so something's not perfect. And the stay has gone from a few days to a fortnight.

I have talked to mum about pulling in help, if needed, from younger neighbours but the social embarrassment will be huge for her. They have to establish their own boundaries pity that didn't happen in childhood.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 22/12/2024 10:03

CatHole · 21/12/2024 09:29

I'd love to hear my brother use 'I' and 'responsibility' in the same phrase. It's a low bar that he has never managed so I'm very excited for you.

My bro is visiting mum for Xmas, which worked well last year after the death of my dad. He'd previously not bothered for 25 years.
My spidery senses are slightly tingling because we know he's been calling in sick to work so something's not perfect. And the stay has gone from a few days to a fortnight.

I have talked to mum about pulling in help, if needed, from younger neighbours but the social embarrassment will be huge for her. They have to establish their own boundaries pity that didn't happen in childhood.

I doubt he wrote those words unprompted. I'm assuming that there's been some "encouragement" from his MH team to take responsibility rather than rely on others. I'm hoping they recognised the pattern of him periodically having these episodes which always previously resulted in him running away and essentially restating his life, and called him out on it.

I'm thinking back to when I had really serious PTSD (after a stay in Intensive Care). I was so ill, could not get out of bed/leave my room. But I desperately wanted to get better and return to my life, so I sought out treatment and support (rather than just rely on DH to "fix" me).

Your brother does sound similar to mine. But as he's still got a mother that isn't prepared to challenge him/withdraw support, so he will just continue with the same behaviour. Just watch out for when your mother isn't an option anymore (age/infirmity) as he may turn to you instead, although it sounds like you've got his number already.

OP posts:
CatHole · 22/12/2024 11:48

@inigomontoyahwillcox it goes in waves. I think my dad, who was an authoritarian character, scared my brother away.
DH & I did more heavy lifting in our 20s and 30s. His amazing girlfriend totally carried the can in his 40s.
That relationship has finished and without my dad around everything has once again shifted.
My brother has always been the golden child at a distance,all past evils are being heaped on ex girlfriends.
My mum is once again busy rewriting everything and it will not help my brother face his demons or take any responsibility. I am having to keep those boundaries strong against both of them.
Here's a taste - A year in, his lovely new flat is a mess because his previous girlfriend over 15. years wouldn't let him 'help' with the housework. There's so much wrong in that idea, I didn't know where to start but that's how she's rationalising his behaviour. I can't think a fortnight together will improve the situation.