Thank you all for the advice.
Notwendy,
Really appreciate hearing about the situation with your family and how you have handled the relationship. You're right that it can be unrealistic to expect an apology. So far, he apologized for fighting with my dad and my one brother and stealing from the other...but has not apologized to me, my sister, or dad's girlfriend. It is so clear that the damage from our mother, and the succession of female caregivers (first me, then sister, now Dad's gf) triggers his hurts and abandonment. In one incident on Christmas Eve, he grew angry that our dad discovered his renewed stealing and drug use, and lashed out to tell my sister and I he would not be getting us Christmas gifts. He mostly used to sulk in his room and never greet anyone for weeks, occasionally lashing out just to be cruel about the ways I cared for him when he was younger or support him now.
I don't need an apology per se. I do want to see a change.
His birthday is coming up next week and I don't really want to reach out. He is currently homeless, living in his car, working a part time job. I know if I do not do something for his birthday he will never let that go. Part of me does also have compassion that birthdays are a unique circumstance and it might be okay as a gesture of goodwill still.
Thank you for saying I can believe I am a good sister. I do. Trying not to measure my worth in the care I give others.
Thank you for encouraging the shift. For the last many years my perspective has been how can I support him, what can I invite him to, what things does he like, trying to love him well while letting him make his own choices. Maybe loving him is leaving him alone for a while.
I have clear boundaries around cursing at me or saying mean things - I tell him this isn't okay, I deserve respect, and the convo is over. The advice to not give advice is sound. He used to ask me for advice a lot, which I happily give, but then he resents it later because his very need for love and care from a maternal figure triggers him.
Pook, thanks! I gratefully was very regulated, compassionate and mindful in my interactions with him over the holidays. So the apology/behavior change is for him to apologize to me. But I will keep it in mind for the future.
Strawberry29, yes, I am waiting for an apology from him and for him to reach out to me. He hasn't been very kind or even pleasant to be around for a while and has rejected most of my efforts to connect.
I appreciate your take and tend to agree - I don't need an apology itself. Whether it is stated or implied, the core is that I deserve respect in our interactions, and I need my brother to show that respect and effort to change his harmful behavior.



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