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Carolyn Hax: Struggling With Sister's Pregnancy
Dear Carolyn: I struggled with infertility for many years and ultimately chose to be childless after many unsuccessful fertility treatments. A few weeks ago, my sister announced a surprise pregnancy, and I’m really struggling with it. How do I tell her this without sounding like a terrible, jealous person?
This will be the only grandchild in our family, and I can’t help feeling as if she’s getting something unfairly. There are some other family dynamics at play here. (Things always seem to work out for her, and my parents give her much more support.)
I feel like a terrible person/sister, but I’m also really struggling.
— Surprised
Surprised: I’m so sorry for your struggle. It’s understandable that your feelings are particularly raw right now.
That’s why it’s not only okay to tell your sister how you feel, but also important that you do. Kindly, generously.
There is always the risk someone will respond poorly to your honesty — especially someone who is both hormonal and adjusting to big feelings of her own. Your other ways of communicating, though, such as facial expressions, body language or conspicuous absences from family gatherings, will often tell the truth for you, whether you want them to or not, and less delicately than you would choose to in words. So words are your chance to get the message right.
I assume she knows of your treatments and disappointments. If that’s the case, then keep your approach to her pregnancy news simple, and make three key points: You are so happy for her. Your feelings are raw right now, so you might not always appear as happy for her as you’d like. You hope she can forgive you for that.
If she doesn’t know, then note your feelings are raw from tough decisions of your own about having children. No more data required.
Again, she might not receive your message well, no matter how kindly you mean it or effectively you deliver it. These are beyond a messenger’s control. You can only try to do right by both of you.
That can include your own reckoning, in private, with the resentment you still carry from your family’s dynamics. Just because it contributes to your current hard feelings doesn’t mean there’s any call to express it. And even if its origins are valid, you can still choose to maintain perspective and not indulge your resentment — with the help of a therapist, if you feel stuck. Your sister did not choose the position she’s in any more than you did. Any children she has won’t have chosen to bring attention to your sister or frustration to you.
In fact, if you and your sister are close enough familially and geographically, and if you have steadied your emotions by then, nurturing a bond with the child as a doting auntie could write a graceful twist into this difficult story. Whether that bond forms or not — something else over which you have only partial say — any openness and warmth you can show to a child, for decency’s sake alone, will be a balm to you both.
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This who know me know my relationship with my younger sister has never been particularly warm, and also that at times, she has the human feeling of a wet dishrag. And yet, she seemed to understand that when she got pregnant almost as soon as she started trying trying when I'd already been in the land of hormones and trans-vag ultrasounds for nearly a year, I was (a) very, very happy for her and (b) sad and frustrated and likely to get weepy at any given moment. There was no fuss when I said I just could NOT go to her baby shower. Maybe she just didn't much care if I was there or not (likely). Maybe she didn't want me getting weepy and taking attention from her (possible). Maybe the travel issue solved the whole thing. But I think having once (once!) said, "I'm so, so happy for you, and if it sometimes seems like I'm not, that's not about you or your pregnancy" eased the way.
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I was particularly struck by Carolyn's advice that you can communicate with behaviour or you can communicate with words, and the latter is more likely to say what you want it to.
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Sometimes hiding your emotions is appropriate! If Jane in sales tells you she’s going on maternity leave, so for the next three months Joan will be handling your month report requests, you say “Congratulations!” Jane in sales doesn’t need to know about your emotional turmoil because you’re not trying to build a deep emotional connection with Jane, and if you can’t keep your mixed feelings out of your tone in a five-minute work call that’s a problem. But presumably you do want an emotional connection with your sister, and you are going to be interacting with her (and your nibling-to-be) with some frequency, and you don’t build emotional connections on lies.
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I am pleasantly surprised at how good this advice is.
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If the sisters were close, of course, talk about it.
But also, if you're close, then the pregnant person knows about your struggles and will take them into account, most likely by keeping the announcement to you low-key and asking you how you'd like them to proceed.
LW doesn't talk about that part, so either it was edited in the letter, or it didn't happen. And in the later case, well, this is something that should be discussed with a therapist or one's support system, not with the sister.
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Family relationships can look all kinds of ways, so I think it's a leap too far to make the assumption that if they're close, the pregnant person must know, and if they don't know then they can't possibly be close.
For one example, I'm close with my sister, and had a significant hand in raising her; we tell each other much of what's going on in our lives. That said, she doesn't get a blow-by-blow of my medical issues, except when they might be relevant. I can readily imagine that if I were to go through fertility treatments, I wouldn't tell her right away -- and I might keep my disappointment to myself if they didn't work out. I can definitely envision myself only telling her this kind of thing if it becomes relevant. Because I'm the eldest and because I helped to raise her, I "protect" her from bad stuff; our five-year age gap and dynamic means we're close in a different way to what you imagine.
Plus... you don't need to be close in the sense of trading confidences all the time to care deeply about each other.
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The point I was trying to make I'd that telling her sister is only useful if the end result is going to make her life easier.
Considering the information we have, I'm not sure the LW and her sister have the kind of relationship where the issue would be handled sensitivity by the sister.
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However, if they can't, they might do better to tell a therapist instead. Or in addition.