I don’t know if I’m looking for advice or just trying to process this, but I finally ended my relationship with my younger sister.
We are 12 years apart. She’s 21 now, and because of our family dynamics, I was more of a parent than a sibling. Our older siblings were largely absent, our parents weren’t very hands-on, and I became the person who consistently showed up for her.
I helped her get into college when she wasn’t taking the application process seriously. I paid for SAT tutoring, hired someone to help with her college applications, and pushed her because I genuinely wanted her to have opportunities I didn’t have.
Before she was even 20, I helped her get multiple jobs, including a bakery job where she was making hundreds of dollars in tips every weekend because of the connections I had, a remote job, and later a medical office job where she eventually became a manager with PTO while still a teenager.
I took off work for her prom, took off work twice to do her makeup and photograph her senior pictures, celebrated every birthday, took her to New York, took her to Colombia twice, and tried to create experiences that made her feel loved because I knew our family wasn’t giving her that.
I never regretted doing any of those things.
Then my health collapsed.
Over the last two years, I’ve developed a severe neurological disorder. I have a constant headache every day, visual disturbances 24/7, fibromyalgia, repeated medication reactions, multiple ER visits, and I’ve been traveling to research hospitals across different states trying to find answers.
I still work full-time. I live alone. I pay my own bills. I don’t expect people to become my caregivers. I just expected my sister to show basic concern during the biggest crisis of my life.
Instead, she fell asleep less than ten minutes into a Johns Hopkins appointment I waited over a year to get.
After one ER visit, she refused to stay with me overnight because she wanted to sleep in her own bed.
She was supposed to drive me to Cleveland for a major neurological appointment. Instead, after disengaging while I was talking about my health, she never called back. I ended up traveling there alone and spending nearly $2,000 because I had no one else.
Before our Colombia trip, I had been hospitalized only two weeks earlier. I rearranged my work schedule around hers because I wanted us to celebrate her new job together. I explained that sleep deprivation makes my neurological symptoms dramatically worse and asked her to handle one responsibility: booking the hotel.
She didn’t.
I ended up traveling while medically unstable, exhausted, and figuring everything out alone.
Most recently, I spent five days hospitalized in Philadelphia for inpatient neurological treatment. I traveled there alone from Washington, D.C. I didn’t know when I would be discharged or how I would get home.
I called her so someone would at least know where I was.
She called once.
That same day I had a severe medication reaction and nearly passed out in the hospital. Even then, I kept the conversation light. We talked about pastries because we both love pastries. I wasn’t emotionally dumping on her.
After that, I received one text.
I ultimately relied on a complete stranger to help me get home.
Later, another family member contacted my sister because nobody had heard from me and wanted to make sure I was okay. Instead of immediately checking on me, she later admitted she relied on my Instagram activity to reassure herself I was alive.
She also later sent me a long email that focused almost entirely on her own feelings. She talked about being jealous after seeing someone in one of my Instagram posts, feeling annoyed, and not feeling “ready” to talk. Meanwhile, the reason I was even in Philadelphia was because I was seeing another specialist, and the person in the picture had simply helped me navigate the city and we grabbed lunch.
Throughout all of this, I repeatedly tried to save our relationship.
Every time something happened, I sat down with her and had detailed conversations explaining exactly what hurt me and why. I wrote pages trying to help her understand my perspective.
Nothing changed.
Every apology came after confrontation. Every acknowledgment had to be extracted. Every difficult conversation required me to corner her before she would take responsibility.
Then, after I finally reached my breaking point, she suddenly started calling me every day.
Instead of making me feel better, it felt performative.
At some point I realized I no longer trusted her—not because she’s imperfect, but because when I experienced the most medically vulnerable period of my life, I consistently felt alone.
I finally blocked her and removed her as my emergency contact.
I’m grieving because I genuinely believed I had a sister.
Instead, I realized I had spent years showing up for someone who, when I finally needed them, made me feel like I had to beg for basic concern.
Am I overeating ?