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How Mental Illness Affects Sibling Relationships 

His Heart Foundation
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How Mental Illness Affects Sibling Relationships. Mental illness has a deep impact on families, including sibling relationships. NAMI (National Alliance Mental Illness) writes that…
“The disruptive force of mental illness is often referred to as family burden. This burden has a subjective component, which consists of the emotional consequences of the illness for other family members, and an objective component, which consists of their everyday problems. At the core of the subjective burden is a powerful grieving process. Family members may mourn for the relative they have known and loved before the onset of the illness, for the anguish of their family, and for their own losses. In addition, family members are confronted with an objective burden-the daily problems and challenges that accompany the mental illness.”
Unbalanced Relationships
Often this dynamic causes unbalanced relationships. As a sibling you can feel caught up in a tsunami of grief, unpredictable moods, anger, confusion, and even despair. The result can be resentment, guilt, and shame. This happens more often when one child is given more attention due to their need, and it can feel like favoritism to the other siblings. As a child you have less coping skills than an adult, and are more vulnerable to trauma.
One woman I spoke with said that she tried to disappear within her family unit as a result of her sibling’s mental illness. She didn’t want to cause any problems, or any more work for her parents who were so taxed by caring for the other children.
Team Up
How can we mitigate these challenges? Although we don’t have control over our circumstances, we do have the choice of how we respond to them. We can choose to be proactive and come together as a unit. Coming alongside each family member, and giving voice to the needs rather than assuming the need is only in the one struggling with mental illness could bring a balanced approach that conceptualizes the situation holistically, instead of blaming everything on one individual. A team perspective could eliminate isolating it to one person and others accommodating to them.
Counselor Debbie Abrahamson says that she has seen families refer to themselves as "Team Smith" including their last name so that the client who is struggling can melt into a secure environment where they feel they are fighting together. As a result, the entire scenario changed. Blame is no longer communicated, and they are bonded to fight the illness rather than feel one person is pointed out as the problem. This perspective shift increases unity and transparency.
Scripture:
Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Colossians 3:13-14 (NIV)
Question:
How has mental illness affected your sibling relationships? Comment below, I’d love to hear from you.

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21 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 4   
@yenketaerica1
@yenketaerica1 3 года назад
Dealing with a sibling with mental illness is like torture sometimes. It is exhausting especially when that person refuses help. The financial aspect of caring for them is so overwhelming. Now add in that they live with you and in order to not trigger an argument where they constantly and I mean constantly speak about all the trauma of the past, you basically avoid them as much as possible with limited interaction for fear of communication breakdown. I myself suffer from mental illness so it is a mentally draining experience. This has been the behavior of my sibling for 33 years. We have only lived together for 2 1/2 years...my mother passed and was taking care of him. Anyway, my relationship is super strained, I literally exhale when he is sleeping or in the bathroom because he has taken over the house basically. When I am home I stay in my room. I grieve for him and myself. And the sad part is, he just has attached himself to the last family member, that can take care of him. That's me. But I don't want to spend the rest of my life in an atmosphere of reliving the trauma he had as a child or the trauma I had in the same household and not moving forward. He is stuck in the past but adamant about trying to make everyone listen and relive in the name of helping him to feel better even though that behavior aggravates my mental illness tremendously. I did not intend on commenting, however, I am so drained and feeling hopeless about it, maybe someone can relate and give some advice. I have never shared this outside of a few friends and of course, fam already has experienced it in real-time. Thanks for reading.
@AngelaHowardMentalHealthTips
@AngelaHowardMentalHealthTips 3 года назад
@YenKeta I am so sorry for the overwhelming situation you are in. Living with someone with a mental illness is very hard and with your own health at risk it must be a deep struggle. As you said - the grief for both you and your sibling! In addition I can imagine the rehearsing of trauma makes is that much heavier of an atmosphere in your home-which should be your safe place. Do you have a therapist that can help you strategize the best way forward?
@deadwings4578
@deadwings4578 3 года назад
This is exactly what I’m going through now with my sister for the last 18 years. I truly do not know what to do anymore. Thank you for opening up, it makes me not feel so alone anymore.
@Nijamization
@Nijamization 5 месяцев назад
It’s a torture to the people around them. Always angry and doesn’t respect for no reason. Self pity, not social and It’s more hard when a provoking person is his own life partner. You know that but cannot say anything because he thinks she right and does not want to listen to the other version. They are so toxic. My parents suffer a lot because of them. I try to stay away because they are toxic and makes me depressed. They are not social and judge each and everyone who comes their way. Not sure how to deal with these people. I am just staying away from but seeing my parents sad makes me sad too.
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