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Relationships

sisters

40 replies

saggyjuju · 24/07/2009 14:32

please just tell me your experience of a sister,i have one and boy what a sister she is! i also have 2 daughters very close in age and would hope that they will be each others rocks

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PilgrimSoul · 24/07/2009 22:01

I have FIVE sisters. We are all wildly different, and clash terribly at times, yet are each other's rocks. I am very sad that my own DD does not have a sister.

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girlandboy · 24/07/2009 22:10

I have a half sister who is 8 years older than me.

I will never speak to her again and I never want to.

The best day of my life was when I realised that I need never see her again.

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magnolia74 · 24/07/2009 22:17

I have 2 sisters, one is 4.5 years younger and I can't stand being in the same room as her she is vindictive, self centered and very disloyal. Unfortubately she lives one road from me and my neice goes to school with my twins.......

My other sister is 10 years younger and I love her more than i can say....she is the most thougtful, reliable person ever

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ridingjoker · 24/07/2009 22:53

i have 2 sisters. one is 3 years older. i used to drive her wild in our younger years.

but now i've matured we get on well. really well infact.

my other sister is 3yrs younger. hard work, emotionally strung, selfish, self centred, spoilt..... but thats just her. still love her all the same... all be it in small doses.

older bro 6 yrs who i used to live with and still stays at mine at wkd so i can get a night out(both LP's and dc dad is useless cancelling twunt)...... he's my fav. and only one of my siblings i can say i've never ever had so much as an arguement with.

older bro of 8yrs...... very glad he lives in oz. takes too many drugs, has slight.... em... worrying pschological issues that are hard to deal with.

used to share a room with both my sisters when little. and just the elder when youngest was a baby.

my god would we tear lumps out each other in physical fights.

and we're all pretty in our own way.. we've all had younger times were boys have said "your the one with the good looking older sister "

and now we're all grown up we realise we shouldn't be jealous... as all unique.

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juicychops · 24/07/2009 22:54

me and my sister are very close in age. we hated eachother when we were teenagers growing up and barely spoke to eachother.

now we both have kids we are very close and speak to eachother every day several times.

she does drive me crazy sometimes as she is so different to me. she can be extremely selfish, she;s very materialistic, mas no idea what its like living in the 'real world' and expects everyone to fit around her most of the time.

but sometimes she can do little things that mean a lot and i can confide in her things that i wouldn't tell anyone else

ever though she does my head in i wouldn't change her for the world

i also have an 8 yr old half sis but dont see very much of her

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Ineedmorechocolatenow · 25/07/2009 03:50

My sister is a PITA. We are 16 months apart and mum and dad treated us more like twins when we were growing up. I resented this as I wanted all the privileges that go with being the oldest (staying out later getting more pocket money etc). She resented it as she was always in my shadow.

As a result, we have a strained relationship, at best. We are so totally different that there is little to keep us in conversation.

It doesn't help that she is so totally selfish and self-absorbed. She is a real whinger and moaner, but refuses to do anything about the problems she has. She thinks that I'm 'Miss Perfect' so refuses to even listen to me in conversations and gloats at my misfortunes....

Luckily I have a little brother who I ADORE and we get on fabulously.

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saggyjuju · 25/07/2009 08:52

ineed i think you just hit it on the head with what must be going on with my sister,she has said years ago that i'm 'miss perfect',trust me far from that and know my faults all too well,she has done things to me as if to say she can be better than me ie slept with my ex paterner,she always slagged off my clothes ,hairstyles etc then went and got them herself and lastly i had daughters which she always wanted a daughter,but my sister took great pleasure in commenting on my daughters chubbiness as a baby,ugliness as a baby and the fact she was a tomboy she would comment"shes never been a girl",well i think shes just perfctand yes she GLOATED at any of my mistakes when i was always positive about hers,thats until now

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Ineedmorechocolatenow · 25/07/2009 13:49

Sorry to hear that saggyjuju, she sounds similar to mine though mine mostly ignores me, which I suppose is easier in a way. Sorry to hear about her attitude to your DD. That's bloody awful! Your sister sounds a lot more toxic than mine....

The thing that pisses me off most about my sister is that no one confronts her about her thoughtless behaviour (which is also directed at my brother and mum) as, for some unknown reason, people are scared of upsetting her.

I'm pretty single-minded and focused I suppose so I get really frustrated when I hear her moaning abut having no money, a crap job, etc. She won't apply for tax credits or any other benefits even though she is certainly entitled to them as she 'can't be bothered to fill out the form'. My mum even got her the forms and offered to fill them in for her, but she still refused. She won't put herself on the council tax list as 'the list is too long' - yes, but you won't get a house at all of you're not on the list. She says she's 'too proud' to claim benefits, but meanwhile taps mum and dad for money as her and her partner have been hit hard by the credit crunch and are short at the moment. I am of the opinion that if you're entitled to benefits, then you should bloody well get them. Mum and dad aren't made of money, but they try to help out where they can. She emotionally blackmails them a lot and mum ends up caving in as she doesn't want my sister's DD to suffer.

She resents the fact that my brother and I went to uni and got good degrees, even though mum and dad made it clear that the money and support was there for her to go. She has a HUGE chip on her shoulder about it and moans that she is stuck in a shit job as all the graduates come and get the good ones. Mum and dad have told her that the money will always be there if she wants to go (no pressure at all, just letting her know). She says she 'can't be bothered'. Fair enough, not sure I could be bothered if I hadn't done it at 18, but STOP BLOODY MOANING ABOUT IT THEN!

When my brother lost his job as a result of the credit crunch, she gloated about how his degree hadn't helped him out. She was put out that he found another, better job within 6 weeks.

She's done a couple of really shitty things to me in the past, although mostly she is just completely thoughtless. She was a moody cow to me on my wedding day (I'd stupidly made her one of my two bridesmaids) and bitched and moaned all day - even on the wedding video about how I was selfish and hadn't said 'happy birthday' to someone on the day(I'd forgotten - it was my wedding day I had other things on my mind, the girl in question didn't even mind). I gave my sister her present and she snorted and walked off. AAAGH!

I used to get quite sad that I had a crap relationship with her and tried to talk to her about it once. She said she wasn't that fussed that we didn't get on, that this was the way it is.

Since then I've had to emotionally distance myself from her. I feel so much better. She is just one of those people who I wouldn't be friends with if we weren't related.

I just wish my mum would tell her how she feels as she really upsets my mum and she just takes it.

I recommend trying to separate yourself off in your mind. It's done wonders for me. Now I just smile and nod and let it all wash over me. It is easier said than done though and has taken a year or two to get my head around.

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saggyjuju · 25/07/2009 14:19

we live within minutes of each other and just drive past each other, i did have to fight the urge not to run her over in the car once after she singled out and excluded my daughters at christmas,have an older son who she bought pressies for and not the girls. touch of class there

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more · 25/07/2009 18:54

I am the middle of three girls. I don't have any contact with my big sister, and rarely speak with my little sister. I only keep in contact with my little sister because of her children. It is a shame as I was really close to my little sister growing up. She is too much like my parents though, although have managed to convince herself that she isn't.

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Overmydeadbody · 25/07/2009 19:52

I have three sisters.

All younger than me, with a two year gap between each one.

They are my best friends, each one bringing something unique to the relationship.

I'd like to think we are all each other's rocks, each playing our own role.

I very much fulfil the role of eldest sister, I'm the one the others call first in a crisis, in floods of tears, or needing someone to talk to or advice. I'm the one they call on for help and information on doing things, household advice, cooking tips, relationship stuff etc.

I don't mind this, they are all also there for me if I need them.

They are lovely girls, kind and sweet and sharing, we would all do anything for each other and we would all drop anything to help each other out.

We also have blazing rows sometimes, and my dad always jokes that when we all get together at some point one of us at least will end up in tears, but we never hold grudges and kiss and make up almost instantly. We can have a blazing row and the next minute move on to something else and be laughing together.

I love them all dearly and this is making me all sentimental and tearful.

They are the reason I don't feel the need to form close friendships with other females.

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shhhh · 25/07/2009 21:29

My sister is 3 years older than me..don't remember much when we were kids but remember arguments galore when we were teens etc.

She moved out of the home at 18 to go to uni (I was 15) and it was bliss. TBH didn't seem to miss her much.

We had a funny ole relationship after this...I would visit the odd time in uni BUT we were complete opposites and never seemed to gel.

Then she met her "now" husband at the same time I met my "now" dh and our lives have pretty much paralled each other..

Things were still a bit strained when dh & I married and she turned down my request to be a bridesmaid (still annoys dh to this day..), yet wanted to be involved in the dress making and recommended a boutique local to her..only to then not want to come along..

She became married months later, although didn't involve me in her wedding She became an aunty about 10 months after dh&i married and visited dd at 5 hrs old which I loved...I guess this was probably the turning point.

She doted on dd and still does and when ds was born very ill she dropped everything to come and support us and help with dd..

She dotes on ds and although never wants dk's of her own she loves her neice and nephew.

She lived an hour away and I guess we got togther about once a month.

However she moved in may this year and is an 8 hour drive away... I probably now have more contact (email/text/skype) with her than I ever have and im glad our relationship went as it has. Im still saddened that she wouldn't be my bridesmaid or come on my hen do etc but she's my sister.

I miss her loads though now....

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bloodyright · 25/07/2009 21:46

I have 5 sisters.

I love them. I hate them. I think they are brilliant. I think they are thoughtless self centred lazy bitches. I think they are the most selfless loving wonderful human beings you could imagine.

Depends what day of the week and what year of my life.

The wonderful thing about me and my sisters is - there ain't no hiding from it. They know you - they really really know you. Not the you of today or the you of the now, but the essence of you, the you of the screeching no holding back arguments about whether or not someone had borrowed someone elses top. how you react under pressure, fear, love. The whole fekin lot.

I bloody love them. They are bloody amazing. I am so lucky to have them. I wish I could let them know in any kind of meaningful way just how amazing they are.

But, I know that they know that I think that

And I know they think the same about me.

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shhhh · 25/07/2009 21:49

lovely post bloodyright....

BUT tell them that you think they are amazing...everyone loves to hear that now and then and oneday you may not get chance...Not to be morbid .

I also end calls with my sis (and mum for that..) with love you. Email and texts the same. My sister makes a joke out of it but has started saying it herself now..At least we know how loved each of us are .

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saggyjuju · 26/07/2009 19:10

its nice to see the good posts,and fills me with hope for my girls. i have spoken to someone who is actively involved in building family values as a priority as she and others believe its why our society is failing,i tend to agree but i put to her that just because you have a title,ie gran,mum,dad,sis etc it doesnt mean that they would behave in a way that you would think their title suggests they behave,its got to start from the top and have mutual respect for each others views and choices and thats the hard part,but heres hoping

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