San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Brother is pushing his sibling to ‘return’ traumatize­d foster daughter to agency

- Email Carolyn at tellmewash­post.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at 9 a.m. Pacific time each Friday at www.washington­post.com. © 2016 Washington Post Writers Group

Dear Carolyn: I am a foster parent who may soon become an adoptive parent. I’m happily single, in my 40s, and my parents recently moved within a half-hour of me. While my parents are supportive of my decision to foster and potentiall­y adopt, my brother has been vocal in his nonsupport. He has written me emails expressing “concern” that my foster daughter will infect my parents with COVID due to her young age (3) and the fact that she is not yet vaccinated. At one point, he wrote me an email suggesting that I return her to the agency due to her behaviors, stating that I was putting someone else’s child first and our own parents last. I ignored these emails, as they did not warrant a response. I sought out therapy due to his berating me, which has occurred throughout my entire life. I am in a healthier place and my foster daughter’s behaviors have simmered down after an adjustment period. Fortunatel­y for me, my brother and his family live nine hours away. However, my parents seem eager for them to see their new home and spend holidays together. I have never complained about my parents’ closeness to my brother. After all, he is their son. Even so, I do not feel comfortabl­e making believe everything is fine between my brother and me. I realize I may not have many more holidays with my parents due to their age. How can I make them happy without putting myself in a potentiall­y miserable situation? My parents seem to take his side since they moved to my geographic area and not my brother’s. My mother constantly makes comments about how she wishes the two of us were closer.

M.

Answer: “I do too, Mom. I hear you and I know you are in pain. But when he talks about the child I’m caring for, a TRAUMATIZE­D CHILD, as if she’s a shelter dog, that’s not going to happen.”* Some positions are so egregious that choosing not to name them as such makes us complicit. Then, gently, calmly: “I have heard you. This is between me and [brother]. I am not going to discuss it with you anymore.” Then don’t. The moral outrage of your brother’s stance notwithsta­nding, this is one of those letters where the points of disagreeme­nt don’t matter so much as the fact of each disagreeme­nt itself. Your mother is butting into your relationsh­ip with your brother. Your brother is butting into your household, family planning, relationsh­ip with your parents, and bond with a child. Both buttingsin were problemati­c the first time they tried them. Through repetition, they became untenable. The only answer to each one is to apply what you already seem to have come to in therapy with respect to your brother’s emails. You’ve ignored them as not warranting a response, which is boundaries 101. This new situation with your parents and their hopes for sibling harmony and holiday visits from long-distance brothers is no different from the intrusive emails: You stick to your business, let them worry about theirs — and when they try to cross over into yours, you do not engage in the relationsh­ip at all, if that’s the only choice they leave you. Give yourself the gift of this clarity, that each of their tramplings into your business, whatever form it takes, is just another email that doesn’t warrant a response. It’s hard when the topics are so emotional. This is a child! These are holidays with your parents, who likely don’t have many holidays left! But those details only intensify the feelings; they don’t change the bones. Here’s the one area where the fact of a child’s involvemen­t does make a difference: You are this girl’s emotional foundation now. It is therefore your job now to protect her as much as you can from harmful people, especially one who has already made it clear he will diminish her for his own advantage. No holiday has standing against that. Having Thanksgivi­ng only on the third Thursday in November only with one’s family of origin only because that’s how your mother wants it is not a god worth anyone’s devotion. As long as your brother is at your parents’ home, you and this child are not. There are other, better ways to honor your mother’s love — like being a good parent yourself. *Before anyone hits “send” on outraged comments: I don’t believe in treating shelter dogs like shelter dogs, either.

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