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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think my sister is projecting her regrets onto me?

143 replies

TheAgileOP · 04/05/2026 18:47

DH (40) and I (40) have been together since we were 19 we met on our first day of uni. From the beginning we always said we didn’t want to rush into settling down and wanted to travel first, and that’s exactly what we did.
After graduating we spent about 18 months in South America volunteering, doing odd jobs, teaching in schools etc. I learnt Spanish (still fluent now) and we had an amazing time. We tried coming back and doing the whole city job thing but it just wasn’t for us, so we carried on travelling on and off for years.

We were very lucky financially I inherited about £300k from my grandad at 25 and DH had some money from a trust fund so we had the freedom to live like that.

We ended up getting married at 36 and had our first baby last August. I absolutely love being a mum and I’m so glad we had our son, but I’m also really glad we waited. I feel ready now and don’t feel like I’ve missed out on anything.

My sister is 3 years older than me and made very different choices. She also inherited a decent amount from our grandad but chose to use it to buy a house with her ex-husband. They got married at 27 had two children, and then divorced. She’s now remarried to someone who is genuinely lovely, so it’s not like she’s in a bad place now.

But over the years there’s been a definite undercurrent from her towards me, and more recently it feels like constant sly comments. When we were travelling she’d say we were “running away from real life”, when we came back and didn’t settle into careers she’d tell us to “grow up”, and when we got married later she made digs about it being “about time”.

Even during my pregnancy and birth she was quite judgemental. I chose to have a water birth with no medication (all approved and it went completely fine), but she made comments about that and about my age which just felt unnecessary.

Recently I mentioned we might like another child and she rolled her eyes, laughed and called me selfish, saying “you and him have had all this time just having fun and now you want to take things seriously?”

What I don’t understand is where this has come from. Growing up and well into our 20s we were really close genuinely close, no big fallouts, nothing bad between us at all. That’s why I find this shift so confusing.

Now it just feels like there’s a lot of judgement from her, and the only way I can make sense of it is that there’s some resentment there about how differently our lives have turned out. She had the same financial opportunities but chose a different path, and I do wonder if she has some regrets, even if she wouldn’t admit it.
I know I’m not completely innocent (I did say years ago she could have travelled before settling down, which she didn’t like), but this feels like more than that.

My sister is far more successful than I am and than I’ll ever be. I’m unsure why it seems as though she resents me.

DH and I are settled into our jobs. I work in policy in civil service and DH is head of maths at an independent school, we are so content with our life. My sister thinks I need to be more ambitious and says I seem lazy, she is on a very high income but seems quite judgmental on DH and I.

OP posts:
MrsCplus · 07/05/2026 01:03

We did it the other way round, had children early 20s, settled down etc but we had loads of fun in our teens together and love being a mum but we are super excited for our kids to get a bit older going into our 40s. Loved every minute with my husband! Different things for different people, your life sounds amazing, tell her to mind her own business!

Tuesdayschild50 · 07/05/2026 02:35

Your sister isn't contented with her life.. where as you both are .
Sis is jealous of your happiness don't change a thing about your life have another baby if you wish too, how lovely .
Your sister has no right to put her resentment onto you .
You have and are living life the right way for you .. don't let anyone take that away from you the only person who needs to check their feelings is your sister x

Todayismyfavouriteday · 07/05/2026 03:00

Every time she interjects one of her comments, my answer would be: 'Well, I have chosen to leave my life the way I've wanted. I've been very lucky, right? I could choose when to travel, when to play, and when to settle down. I am exactly where I want to be. I'm sorry if you have other ideas about how life should be lived.'
Repeat, and repeat as necessary. That should shut her up.

Todayismyfavouriteday · 07/05/2026 03:25

Todayismyfavouriteday · 07/05/2026 03:00

Every time she interjects one of her comments, my answer would be: 'Well, I have chosen to leave my life the way I've wanted. I've been very lucky, right? I could choose when to travel, when to play, and when to settle down. I am exactly where I want to be. I'm sorry if you have other ideas about how life should be lived.'
Repeat, and repeat as necessary. That should shut her up.

*live my life😂(otherwise the comment might be counterproductive!)

CrazyGoatLady · 07/05/2026 05:09

Sister's comments sound mean and unnecessary, but I do wonder what the background to the dynamics are, what role OP has played in those and what the parent-child-sibling dynamics are. It's easy to get comfortable in assigned family roles and it feels like there's been an established dynamic where OP's sister has adopted the "sensible oldest" role and OP the role of the carefree, free spirited youngest.

It's not unlike my own dynamic with my half DSis who is getting married this year. It does feel strange - I've been the one at home supporting the family through various crises, elderly care, etc for many years while she was off travelling, living in different countries, etc. I'm rather a typical over responsible eldest and she sees me as a bit boring, I can't even go to her European destination wedding in the city her partner's family live because it's in the middle of younger DC exams - an example of things she's just never had to even think about. There's a lot you just aren't exposed to as the sibling living abroad who only visits occasionally.

It's an uneasy shift when the established role dynamics change. DSis will be a married woman soon and wants to start a family. A big fuss is being made of her wedding, as it should be, but I can't help but also feel a little sidelined. I supported the family a lot for months while DF had cancer treatment, at the expense of my own health and my DC, and haven't had much acknowledgement of that. I suppose there's a wee green eyed part of me that feels like not only does DSis get to be the fun, interesting one, with her cosmopolitan European lifestyle, international friends and travel stories, she'll also present a more interesting version of marriage and parenthood. She talks about how her kids will be multilingual, go to international schools, they won't be like the kids in the UK who don't bother learning languages and aren't interested in other cultures, apparently!

ItsOkItsDarkChocolate · 07/05/2026 06:54

GeorgianFavade · 04/05/2026 19:47

You sound great and if I can be frank, your sister sounds like a total pain in the arse.

Shes bitter, jealous and insecure; no other explanation for it. She belittles your choices to validate her own because deep down, she didn’t have the balls to do what you did. If she was confident and comfortable with her own choices (which are perfectly valid ones), she wouldn’t say anything.

I’d call her out on it or even just tell her to fuck off, when she raises it.

Edited

@TheAgileOP This!

nochance17 · 07/05/2026 07:55

Because she’s not as happy as you might think, yes she may be successful with a high income and on the surface have a happy second marriage but she’s clearly not content with her life to be aiming all this criticism of your life choices at you, happy people don’t do that. You have lived your life the way you wanted and it sounds great. Your sister sounds bitter and possibly jealous, trying to devalue your choices, probably to make herself feel better. In her mind she is in competition with you, she is narcissistic. I would have it out with her , ask her what’s her problem ? , reinforce you are happy and content so why is she so invested in what you’re doing, you are just fine and don’t need a running commentary from her and she should direct her energy to her own life. Consider going low contact if all she brings is negativity.

Portugal1987 · 07/05/2026 09:21

I’ve had a similar life as you did (except the inheritence part lol), and I get similar vibes from people. You just sound incresibly happy, and people can be weird around that.

We’ve only bought our first house now at 37/38, but had comments throughout our twenties that we “had to get on the property ladder”, had a child 2 years ago and had comments about “having the energy”.

It’s annoying, but there’s literally nothing you can do about someone else’s feelings.

HideousKinky · 07/05/2026 11:08

I had a sister who sniped at me continually and undermined me in a number of ways. Now I'm older, I wish I had not let it upset me as much as it did at the time. I distanced myself from her - perhaps you should do the same OP?

SilverVixen101 · 07/05/2026 12:42

Nothing to add about your sister but I just wanted to say your life sounds very like my best friend's (and she had her second child at 40). I too did everything much later on as I did not partner up with my fella till my mid 30s - but had led the life of riley before then and continued to have a load of fun with him until we had our children (at 41 and 42 years of age for me). We've continued to go on great travels with them including road trips all over the world. I just want to lend you support for the whole later motherhood thing - in my case it was the only option life presented me with, but I think if I had been given a guaranteed choice at 25 I would still have opted for the way things have turned out.

Coffeeslurper · 07/05/2026 16:37

I want to time travel, too! 😛

ForGreyGoose · 09/05/2026 17:53

Oooh, this reeks of jealousy and bitterness. Envy is a sin as they say. You sound lovely and have clearly enjoyed and relished the opportunities and choices you've made. Good for you. Instead of being jealous she should be proud. I wouldn't give her the time of day and rise above it. It's her issue, not yours. Leave her to her own bitterness. The old saying goes... remember if you've not got anything nice to say......

LubyLooTwo · 09/05/2026 20:22

It's jealousy. If you get any more crap from her just remind her she made bad life choices.

Morepositivemum · 10/05/2026 05:32

It is jealousy, she’s been through the wringer with divorce and she sees you haven’t. Jealousy isn’t rational, unfortunately. I agree with the people telling you to tell her to stop. I don’t think you have to lower yourself to saying ‘just because things went crap for you’ as some people say, but she does need to know she’s always putting you down and it’s not ok. Maybe even an ‘are you ok?’ might help (if you can be the bigger person, I know it’s hard when someone keeps picking)

ThisJadeBear · 10/05/2026 11:18

Firstly your sister is very lucky she inherited so much. Yes, she been through a divorce, she’s met someone else and has her own DC and a high paying job.
You, technically, could be jealous of her.
You could say…
I wish we’d settled down a bit earlier.
I am going to be in my 50’s looking after teens.
But you don’t feel that way at all because you see life as a gift. You are not too old to have another baby. You sound like you’ve really enjoyed life so far and will approach the next section with that attitude.
Your sister, at some point, has been at home with young babies and an awful DH. Maybe she’s sick of friending questions about her adventurous sister.
That’s not your problem.
The sad thing is you could be great friends now - you are both settled, financially sorted.
But sadly she doesn’t actually want to see your happy life.

Hubbalooloo · 13/05/2026 14:19

Have you asked her? Maybe just start with ‘have I done something to upset you?’ You both sound like you have nice lives.

Hubbalooloo · 13/05/2026 14:20

LubyLooTwo · 09/05/2026 20:22

It's jealousy. If you get any more crap from her just remind her she made bad life choices.

She didn’t though. She made different choices not bad ones.

Hubbalooloo · 13/05/2026 14:27

CrazyGoatLady · 07/05/2026 05:09

Sister's comments sound mean and unnecessary, but I do wonder what the background to the dynamics are, what role OP has played in those and what the parent-child-sibling dynamics are. It's easy to get comfortable in assigned family roles and it feels like there's been an established dynamic where OP's sister has adopted the "sensible oldest" role and OP the role of the carefree, free spirited youngest.

It's not unlike my own dynamic with my half DSis who is getting married this year. It does feel strange - I've been the one at home supporting the family through various crises, elderly care, etc for many years while she was off travelling, living in different countries, etc. I'm rather a typical over responsible eldest and she sees me as a bit boring, I can't even go to her European destination wedding in the city her partner's family live because it's in the middle of younger DC exams - an example of things she's just never had to even think about. There's a lot you just aren't exposed to as the sibling living abroad who only visits occasionally.

It's an uneasy shift when the established role dynamics change. DSis will be a married woman soon and wants to start a family. A big fuss is being made of her wedding, as it should be, but I can't help but also feel a little sidelined. I supported the family a lot for months while DF had cancer treatment, at the expense of my own health and my DC, and haven't had much acknowledgement of that. I suppose there's a wee green eyed part of me that feels like not only does DSis get to be the fun, interesting one, with her cosmopolitan European lifestyle, international friends and travel stories, she'll also present a more interesting version of marriage and parenthood. She talks about how her kids will be multilingual, go to international schools, they won't be like the kids in the UK who don't bother learning languages and aren't interested in other cultures, apparently!

Yes it’s different from the other side. Maybe OP’s DS would have liked her sister around more when she was bringing up her kids and going through a divorce. They only way to know how she feels is to ask her gently

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