E
EasterJoy
Guest
I have a great many older brothers. I considered us very close. If they needed to leave in the time it took to take a shower, I’d drop what I was doing and make them a sandwich to eat on their way to where they were going. I’d wrap their Christmas presents for them. They’d do stuff for me, too. We shared the TV well.
When I started high school, I wanted some independence from them. Had there been a movie that one of them knew I wanted to see and no one else wanted to see with me, that would have been sweet, but they didn’t try to interest me in their hobbies and I didn’t try to interest them in mine. We didn’t make any particular effort to find “quality” time, which we did do for things the entire family was doing together. I would have thought it odd for them to pursue me to fill out their social life instead of finding friends of their own, to be blunt.
I had brothers who teased me and brothers who didn’t. I wouldn’t have felt particularly inclined to talk to either about things that were not already mutual interests. I wouldn’t have had a lot of patience from “pestering” from any of them. Frankly, I would’ve dug my heels in and avoided whatever they had in mind they could wear me down into doing.
As for this quote: What on earth is she thinking, that those few minutes are going to satisfy me?, my answer to my brother would have been this: “Whereever did you get the idea that it is my job to satisfy you? Where did you get the idea that you are entitled to some portion of my time? You are not, so get over that. We have what we mutually agree to have. You may demand nothing.”
My suggestion is that you make these efforts with one or both of your parents, instead. Leave your little sister alone, or else approach her with your hat in hand, lest she develop a dread of seeing you coming. It takes roughly 20 years to get over that.
When I started high school, I wanted some independence from them. Had there been a movie that one of them knew I wanted to see and no one else wanted to see with me, that would have been sweet, but they didn’t try to interest me in their hobbies and I didn’t try to interest them in mine. We didn’t make any particular effort to find “quality” time, which we did do for things the entire family was doing together. I would have thought it odd for them to pursue me to fill out their social life instead of finding friends of their own, to be blunt.
I had brothers who teased me and brothers who didn’t. I wouldn’t have felt particularly inclined to talk to either about things that were not already mutual interests. I wouldn’t have had a lot of patience from “pestering” from any of them. Frankly, I would’ve dug my heels in and avoided whatever they had in mind they could wear me down into doing.
As for this quote: What on earth is she thinking, that those few minutes are going to satisfy me?, my answer to my brother would have been this: “Whereever did you get the idea that it is my job to satisfy you? Where did you get the idea that you are entitled to some portion of my time? You are not, so get over that. We have what we mutually agree to have. You may demand nothing.”
My suggestion is that you make these efforts with one or both of your parents, instead. Leave your little sister alone, or else approach her with your hat in hand, lest she develop a dread of seeing you coming. It takes roughly 20 years to get over that.