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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

My brother texting me instructions telling me how to behave!

70 replies

EL8888 · 05/07/2019 08:04

I have woken this morning to a text from my brother informing me my godmothers husband has had a stroke (l know this) and instructing me to be nice to our mother this weekend (she is coming to visit me). That’s literally all it says. More than just a little condescending and rude!

I’m fuming. For clarity he lives abroad, does his own thing 24/7 and keeps my Mum at arms length as much as possible. He claims he forgot my Mum’s birthday one year, cue no card / present / phone call. They share the same birthday so no excuse! In terms of our relationship it’s quite on his terms with him going off the radar for a month or weeks at a time. He often visits near where l live which l sometimes find out about after or during. I suggest meeting up but often he doesn’t even reply to my messages

My mother can be rather hard work. Things have to be her way or she escalates very quickly. When my Dad died her behaviour was very poor -arguing with all of his family, verbally abusing me (you didn’t love him, you let him down etc), refusing to go to his funeral as she hated the rest of us etc. They had been apart for 20 years by that point so an unusual reaction in many ways. My mum finds it impossible to see other people’s perspectives which means she can be quite tactless and unfeeling. My DP thinks l have the patience of a saint, just from the 20 line text messages she sends me! I challenge her behaviour when warranted, in contrast my brother feeds into it briefly, then jumps on a plane and disappears. Leaving the rest of us to deal with things

There is a huge back story -as there often is with most families so l am trying to include relevant information but not bombard! I’m trying to take a breath before l fire off a message back to my brother

OP posts:
SagAloojah · 05/07/2019 08:14

YANBU. I wouldn’t be able to stop myself giving brother a fee home truths. Text him back and get it off your chest. He has knob and you don’t have a good relationship anyway.

LorelaiRoryEmily · 05/07/2019 08:16

Tell him to fuck off. That’s what I’d doGrin

ems137 · 05/07/2019 08:18

Why are you trying to hold back? I wouldn't. He needs telling some home truths and why should he just get away with being a prick all the time?

Lemond1fficult · 05/07/2019 08:20

Yeah. Normally I'd not recommend burning bridges, but it sounds as if there are none to burn. So give yourself the satisfaction of letting rip. How bloody dare he?

zingally · 05/07/2019 08:26

Just ignore the message.
My sister's other half thinks he's the font of all knowledge on absolutely everything, and will send me texts or facebook messages attempting to educate me on things I already know, or things I just don't care about.
For instance, earlier in the week, he messaged me to tell me the timetable for my local bus route was changing... I literally catch the bus 2 or 3 times a year, and always check the timetable anyway!

Last week I completed the online portion of some first aid training I did, and scored 100%, so posted a pleased post on FB. He replied "I personally prefer face to face training, as I think it's better quality." I'd literally been out all day, doing exactly that. Fortunately my sister jumped in with an "ummm… So did she", and he backed down.

I've had to mute him on all social media, as I find him so intensely annoying, and when he just message me something rude, I just ignore it. Don't rise to their bait. Let everyone else see their bad behaviour, and don't be a part of it.

Dyrne · 05/07/2019 08:31

I feel your pain OP - I too have to pick up the main responsibility for a family member while my other family member has fucked off abroad and wants a gold medal for the 3-4 times a year she bothers to do something; meanwhile i’m stuck with the daily grind.

Either hold your head high and ignore, or let rip at him - depends on what would make you feel better - taking the high road or tearing him a new one Grin

Dontcallmeprecious · 05/07/2019 08:33

Ask him when you should be expecting him when he flies in for a few weeks to support your mother.

sacope · 05/07/2019 08:40

Meh, I would say something like that to my sibling. 'Oh x has happened, be nice to the old witchy family member' but it's more of a 'you know what's she is like' type thing than condescending and rude.

Sarahjconnor · 05/07/2019 08:41

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Awrite · 05/07/2019 08:43

Just ignore his message. Pretend it didn't happen.

greenlynx · 05/07/2019 08:43

I would answer him politely at first but straight to the point mentioning what you’ve said here.
I wonder if your Mum’s complaining to him about you so he’s got absolutely wrong picture. I’m the one who is abroad in my family and my Mum does this regularly and it’s very difficult sometimes to separate truth from fiction.

feebeecat · 05/07/2019 08:44

Yup, been there too. Eldest sibling telling me to look after mum after dad died. I had been looking after the pair of them for years, pointed this out, sibling went NC. I didn't rant or shout, feel a little short changed about that Grin but meh, have more important things in my life.
Have to say, apart from the odd occasion when they swoop in to cause high drama, I quite like the quiet - it's just business as usual for my little family. Step away and give yourself a few hours to either compose appropriate message, or just ignore. YANBU

7yo7yo · 05/07/2019 08:45

I’d ask him when he’s booking her a ticket to stay with him and tell him to get to fuck.

IvanaPee · 05/07/2019 08:46

I’d either tell him to fuck off or I’d ignore him and block him for a while. Seriously I would.

diddl · 05/07/2019 08:46

If he keeps you at arms length then it's surely a way of pretending to be involved/concerned iyswim?

Sounds as though he might be doing the best thing by keeping away from your mum though!

Probably best ignored though-you're spending time & energy on this stuff & I bet he isn't!

AliMonkey · 05/07/2019 08:48

I think the back story is clouding this. I would absolutely say to a sibling something like “in case you didn’t know, X has happened so be nice to Mum this weekend” and they wouldn’t be offended and vice versa. Would you feel differently if a good friend had said it to you instead?

Given the back story, though, I might be tempted to respond with “Thanks for letting me know (though I had already found out). Of course I’ll be nice to Mum - but must be your turn to see her soon!”

Erythronium · 05/07/2019 08:50

Ignore it. You'll feel worse if you respond.

How very annoying though.

WatcherintheRye · 05/07/2019 08:50

"I don't need to be given hints on how to behave, thank you, unlike some....."

trackingmedown · 05/07/2019 08:58

Family are like that. My SIL once messaged my DH telling him we should leave MIL’s holiday home tidy after we stayed there - as if we would do anything else. She also lives overseas and is full of advice about how her sister should take care of the now elderly mum. I eye roll and ignore but it has driven a real wedge between the two,sisters who were once very close.

If you really have to say something keep it brief “thank you, but I’m not an idiot’. Or sarky ‘thank you so much for the good advice, I’d never have thought of it on my own. Perhaps you could send me some menu suggestions too, I’d be very grateful’.

EL8888 · 05/07/2019 08:59

@WatcherintheRye yeah my reply had the flavour of that basically. Who the fuck does he think he is?! Plus this year hasn’t been a bundle of laughs for me either. But a common dynamic is a world of allowances is made for my mother but never for me

OP posts:
IvanaPee · 05/07/2019 09:00

@AliMonkey I’m close to my siblings but if one of them messaged me to tell me to be nice to my mother, they’d get a fuck off, too.

Why would you feel the need to text and tell your sibling that? How patronizing!

HollyBollyBooBoo · 05/07/2019 09:01

Either ignore or put a 😂 as a response

AFistfulofDolores1 · 05/07/2019 09:02

"Please don't ask me again to compensate for your own lack of care and concern."

EL8888 · 05/07/2019 09:06

@trackingmedown yeah mixed in with a side order of sarcasm!

I don’t how people think others get through live. I’m sure you knew to tidy?! I have a responsible high stress job and manage to negotiate through that without him

OP posts:
EL8888 · 05/07/2019 09:07

@HollyBollyBooBoo yeah and treat it like he was joking. That would be ironic...

OP posts: