Home→Forums→Relationships→Adult sibling wants to know why I avoid her…how to be kind, truthful, and help
- This topic has 7 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 3 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 5, 2016 at 6:14 pm #111642PeaceatlastParticipant
My sibling is 65 and the oldest in our family. I decided a decade ago to avoid contact with her in order to protect myself. I experience this person as someone who doesn’t respect anyone’s boundaries and who Has told me that the way she gets people to do what she wants them to is to beat them over the head until they do…..figuratively speaking. She feels I’ve shunned her and wants to know what she did to deserve it. In the past, I have simply deleted e-mail from her. But now I’m concerned this could be a major life lesson I must learn, and I’m seeking wisdom on how to manage the relationship and the reply, if any. Thank you for your support.
August 5, 2016 at 7:19 pm #111646AnonymousGuestDear pieceworkjeanaol-com:
You avoided your sibling in the past because she threatened your well being, and so you protected yourself from her by having no contact with her- good job on your part!
She wants to know what she did to deserve you avoiding her- and you are considering answering her instead of just deleting her email.
Things to consider in deciding what to do:
Did you tell her in the past that you had a problem with her aggressive behavior? If you did, how did she respond?
anita
August 6, 2016 at 2:56 am #111662Christian MillsParticipantAhhhhhh, not good or nice but nice to hear I’m not alone!! I’m so sorry that this is your situation but I understand TOTALLY!! I don’t and can’t see my brother because he is constantly trying to make me feel small and pointless. Then, like you, when I shun him he blames me and says I have the problem. I’m sure, like me your heart yearns to have a healthy relationship and know your sibling. I don’t know what to do anymore either. How do you make it back and will it ever be worth it are very big questions!!!
August 6, 2016 at 6:54 pm #111740PeaceatlastParticipantAnita, Thank you for your interest. I’ve never told her, no. My husband did, though, which led to many years of strained relations with family, as they believed what she told them. I never defended myself as I believe the true nature of things will come out eventually.
August 6, 2016 at 7:04 pm #111741PeaceatlastParticipantChris, thank you for your reply and commiseration. It seems cowardly and beneath our true natures to ignore/avoid answering. To do so sets Me up to be maligned to the rest of family, who will believe I’m the one causing the problem. Perhaps this is part of the suffering the Buddah spoke of; yet we can find happiness by knowing our true nature, by going within.
August 6, 2016 at 8:07 pm #111743AnonymousGuestDear Peaceatlast:
Well, why don’t you tell her why you have been avoiding her, the truth as it is, no excess words, no apologizing, no vagueness, just tell her specifically the reason. As calmly as you can and in a matter of fact way.
Then wait. Listen to what she says. It may be a good idea after she responds to tell her that you need to think about her response, then get off the phone and think about it, talk to another about it, maybe even post here for feedback (I will reply). You may need time to evaluate and process her response, to understand it.
After processing it, you can decide on what to say on a second conversation. If there will be one.
And then maybe a third. Or not, depending on whether she responds to you with honesty and whether she is accusatory and blaming and such. In case of the latter, best you continue to protect yourself from her by resuming no contact.
anita
August 9, 2016 at 7:30 am #111982PeaceatlastParticipantGood idea…so obvious, too! Thank you for being sensible. A couple of tinybuddha blog posts and a few YouTube talks helped me find the right tone. I kept it brief as you suggested, and focused my message on how I feel instead of what I need from her. I’ve learned, as Chris stated, that these folks twist our words to say what we never said nor meant. It’s more difficult to argue a person’s feelings, so that’s where I stayed. Is “family togetherness” an illusion created in Victorian times? I ask that because everything else that’s nutty comes from novels and paintings from those times….
August 9, 2016 at 7:37 am #111984AnonymousGuestDear Peaceatlast:
“Is ‘family togetherness’ an illusion..?” you asked. It is any child’s most intense need, this family togetherness. The child will do anything for togetherness, bend herself out of cognitive shape any which way so to have a feeling of some ‘family togetherness’. In reality, for very many people, the bending out of shape we do as children makes for a dysfunctional lives.
Yes, it is very often an illusion, I say.
anita
-
AuthorPosts