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Wedding Woes

My parents want me to take in my lazy, selfish brother.

Dear Prudence,
My boyfriend and I have been together for several years and recently started living together. We both have well-paying jobs and we’d like to get married someday. The problem is my younger brother. He’s 23 and very smart, but he’s lazy, disrespectful, and a slob. He dropped out of college after a semester and has lived in my parents’ basement ever since, relying on them for everything. He also spent most of my childhood making the lives of my sisters and myself hellish whenever we were home—he shoved us around, insulted and mocked us. My parents are elderly and will likely be moving into an assisted-living facility in the next few years. They have two lovely dogs that my boyfriend and I have agreed to take in when that happens (we’re huge animal lovers), but for the last year or two, my parents have been making noises about my brother’s living with us or one of my sisters. I refuse to spend the rest of my life providing for and cleaning up after a lazy jerk, and my sisters feel the same way. The three of us worked hard and were entirely independent by our early 20s; we are happy, functioning adults with good relationships with our parents and each other. We’re all worried that announcing “little brother needs to get a job and provide for himself, because he’s sure as hell not living with any of us” will strain our relationship with our parents (who we love). Do you have any advice?

—Yes to the Dogs, No to the Brother

Re: My parents want me to take in my lazy, selfish brother.

  • Boundaries.  Set them.  Immediately.

    LW and her sisters do not need this financial and emotional black hole.  I may be reading a whole lot more into it than I should be, but it's entirely possible that if any one of the other siblings agrees to take the brother in, for any reason or amount of time, the brother will just leech away at them forever.

    He's an adult capable of supporting himself, but as long as someone is there to do it for him, he never will.

    My mom's older brother was like this.  Never worked a day in his life, lived with their mother until she died, and now lives SS check to SS check.  He's family, and I love him, but I cannot imagine the drain he would have been on my parents if she had helped support his lifestyle.


    "And when they use our atoms to make new lives, they won’t just be able to take one, they’ll have to take two, one of you and one of me..."
    --Philip Pullman

  • Have a honest conversation with your parents (much like how you just wrote this letter). Tell them you are not interested in providing for him and that he needs to become sufficient all on his own. 

    Does anyone one else think that maybe this has to do with him being the only son? And some belief that a woman needs to care for him? 
  • Oh, fuck that noise. It's not like he has a disability or something. He just doesn't want to work. They should not have to foot the bill for him. 
    What did you think would happen if you walked up to a group of internet strangers and told them to get shoehorned by their lady doc?~StageManager14
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  • Big fat nope. LW does not have any responsibility to take in her brother, nor do her sisters.
  • I also think it's really odd that the parents would make such a request of their daughters. How about talk to your son about how now he's going to have to adult? 
    What did you think would happen if you walked up to a group of internet strangers and told them to get shoehorned by their lady doc?~StageManager14
    image
  • I agree with Charlotte that sisters need to come together and meet with the parents.  I do wonder if this has to do with a specific culture where the males are always taken care of or because he is the only son.

    They should also encourage their parents to start the process now, where son begins to be self-sufficient so he can have some time to save money to move out on his own.  Most likely, if the parents move into assisted living, they will need to sell the house to prove to the facility they will have the funds to pay for the facility.

    The united front of sisters will show the parents that son needs to work on starting his own life and stop mooching off his parents.



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  • It's ridiculous the parents would even expect this.  But to "soften the blow" the sisters' could describe the very real reasons this is not possible.  I'm assuming they are all in their 20s.  This is PRIME time for starting a family, saving for a house (or paying down the principal), start saving for college funds, start putting money away for retirement.  It is exponential how much more someone needs to save for retirement the later they start on it.

    But then I'm pretty blunt also.  Even if it would upset them, I'd just tell them, "You know, I love brother.  But I don't like him.  He is a slobby nightmare to live with and both my FI and I would be absolutely miserable if he lived with us.  Not happening.  Period."

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  • SP29SP29 member
    Sixth Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    I like my two brothers, they are not lazy slobs, but I still wouldn't want them living with me!

    He's an adult who is capable of working and renting a room/apartment. Time to let the baby bird fly from the nest.
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