Have You Ever Wanted To Boot Your Sister In the Ass?
1st the Back Story…
My mother, actually step-mom who raised me from the age of 6, had a ’substantial’ heart attack March 10th. At first we, the family, thought she had skated through with little damage.
However, as time passed and information trickled in from her care givers — an immensely frustrating aspect of our overloaded Canadian healthcare — we discovered her heart was badly damaged. Can you say Myocardial Infarction?
For the first 6 days the parents were in SHOCK. Dad was walking around like a lost little boy. Mum had turned into a belligerant little girl. Yummy!
I, the eldest boy, was naturally expected to take charge! In our little German-Canadian family, that means massive responsibility with little actual power and authority.
Then on Monday of this week, Mum and Dad, both moved into Phase 2 of the Transition cycle: DENIAL. In mum’s case, massive denial salted with anger and resentment.
Yesterday, my twin sister and I were finally able to talk to the cardiologist and get the ‘truth’. The truth being the facts: NOT the story mum was telling.
As you may know, people in denial: hear what they want to hear, say what the doctor wants to hear, and then when the doctor (or other health professional) leaves, go back to doing what they WANT to do — and, then lie to their family (or conveniently forget what was said) about what the doctor or other health care professional said.
Yesterday I explained to my sister that neither of my parent’s could be reasoned with. They want what they want and they DO NOT want to have to CHANGE!
So, I told my sister that she and I (and baby bro) needed to psychologically prepare for my mum to die because of NON COMPLIANCE with doctor’s orders. My sister nodded her head and agreed! (GEE! I wonder where she learned that?)
I told her, “I’m letting go. I’m backing away. I’m not any longer going to try to convince mum and dad to change.”
I promised I would phone baby bro, who had been out of town during this adventure, and fill him and his wife in on the details and next steps.
TODAY:
I phoned bro, talked to his wife, and was surprised to find both of them calm and cooperative.
Then I phone sis to keep her in the loop and to suggest that she might want to want to move into a hotel when my mum came home. I said, “you might not want to be in the middle of an insane situation that is going to cause you pain!
Sis proceeded to argue with me. “No. Mum maybe had some slight brain damage from hypoxia. No. She’s not being resistant. She’ll take her meds. She’ll change her behaviour.” This garbage coming out the mouth of the woman who just yesterday agreed that mum and dad were both in denial and resistant.
I said to sis, “Look. This is my advice. I’m done. Do what you want.” Sis proceeds to argue with me, even more.
Now, I’m pissed! So, I say to her, “I SAID I WAS DONE! GOODBYE!” And, hung up.
I’m still pissed. Even though I’ve practice my deep breathing and vacuumed the floor.
So, I decided to vent by writing this post. And, using the writing to figure out the cause of my anger.
DUH! Darling Sis just stomped all over my boundaries.
And, what IS the BIG ISSUE for sexual abuse victims?
Can you say: BOUNDARIES?
Good thing I’m leaving for Yoga in 5 minutes. I know that by the time I’ve done 90-minutes of floor routines I’ll feel better and less likely to want to smack her a good one!
MMu
Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Lyle,
my story with my parents mirror yours. My dad had a TIA several years ago, was discovered to have diabetes, given medications and told to lose weight. He lost some, never took medications, then gained all the weight (and more) back. As a matter of fact he died of cerebral hemorrhage just few days before your mom’s heart attack. The difference was, his mom was 90 when she died, whereas he was a whopping 68.
My mom needs knee replacement. ALL the docs she’s been to agreed with this. But my mom thinks she doesn’t. So she keeps on being overweight, not exercising AND stressing her knee… all of this without any plan to get through any surgery. Last time I spoke to her I was like: “Look, you need to have it done. You don’t want to? Fine. But when your knee splits open I don’t want to hear about it”.
Your sister is the problematic one. She obviously chose to “believe” your mom because she (your sister) doesn’t want to change *either*, and she probably thinks she can “save” your mom and stuff. Keep your boundaries firm! Refuse to discuss ANY stress your sister gets from mom, ANY sadness, anything regarding her choice. In other words, give her consequences. It might change her view but that’s not the point. The point is, you need tranquility and people respectful of your boundaries.
Much Love
Ro’
Thanks Ro!
You are so CORRECT … sis keeps unconsciously trying to suck me back into the drama triangles.
I walk a fine line between myself and my family … including sis … caring but removed.
I deal with baby bro by NOT talking to him at all.
You take care yourself.
Lyle