|
Notices |
Way Off Topic For non-Foster's-related *discussions* (not spam). Posts that are religious, sexual, or political in nature will be heavily moderated. Please keep it clean! |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
03-24-2008, 02:25 PM | #11 |
Not-So-Hopeless Romantic
|
My brother actually just recently lost his job. I do have a job, same one for about 4 years now, part time only though because I am still going to school. My brother doesn't get into bars but he feels I SHOULD because I'm already past 21 and he does like booze.
And yes he has had drinks in our house despite the fact he's not 18, he'll get booze one way or another if he can't get anything here.
__________________
|
03-24-2008, 03:37 PM | #12 |
super-scientist
GO TEAM VENTURE!
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Lake George
Posts: 1,500
|
huh.
well, smack him around a bit and tell him to back off.
__________________
Think you used enough dynamite there, Butch?
|
03-24-2008, 03:52 PM | #13 |
Undisputed Ruler of Terrencania
|
I have to say, I don't understand just WHY your life upsets your brother so much. What bad thing exactly will happen to him if you don't change the way you live?
__________________
|
03-24-2008, 04:12 PM | #14 |
Foster's Legend
40% pretention, 60% insecurity, 0% brains
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: The only place more isolated than Iceland. New Zealand
Posts: 547
|
Ugh, no offence, man, but sounds like your brother didn't get spanked enough as a child. Isn't it ironic that big "macho man" types are usually incapable of knowing when THEY'RE the ones acting like a baby? I'd say getting in a violent tizzy on a regular basis over his older brother's lifestyle is pretty immature. I, at least, was brought up with the belief that I should respect my older brother, even if I disagree with him.
However, your brother's 18. He's chomping at the bit to leave home and become independant. Once he does, he'll probably settle down a bit and realise how important family is, I know it worked that way for MY older brother, who acted similarly. I think the guy needs some space between you and him. Finally, if you have SOME contact with other human beings, that means you aren't socially inept. You post enough here, and I assume other places, to constitute that. The guy is just very close-minded, and can't understand that virtual conversation can be just as stimulating as the regular kind. So, my advice is to tough it out for the next year or so, and wait for the guy to graduate and move out. Avoid him as much as possible. This may sound callous, but there's not a lot you can do for him now, hopefully in a few years he'll have come to his senses.
__________________
Unconscious like a fox!
|
03-24-2008, 04:48 PM | #15 | |
Not-So-Hopeless Romantic
|
Quote:
Which is redundant when his life has gone from anything BUT normal. Truth be told, I'd normally not be this scared or worried about it but after seeing all the measures my parents have gone to to keep him out to ensure he mellows out and relaxes and the fact my dad LITERALLY called the cops on him. That concerns me. I always felt of all the families in the world, not to sound arrogant, but I always felt happy knowing we never needed to call the police on each other. Not that people who do that are monsters but, its like you know, never thought that would happen to my family, you know?
__________________
|
|
03-24-2008, 06:36 PM | #16 | |
Lady of Brightwood
|
I second pretty much what everyone else said. Siblings can be difficult. It's one thing when you're kids, but when you're grown it can become a totally new issue. It can be really tough, and since you know eachother so well and are all too aware of what's going on and the discomfort and awkwardness involved, sometimes it's much easier for everyone to just let them make their mistakes and hope for the best. It's sad, and it's hard. But most of us have gone through a similar stage at one time or other, for some of us it wasn't bad and for other's it was very severe. After some time, he'll get it together again and will likely turn out fine.
There is certainly nothing wrong with what you're doing with your life. You've got it together- about to get your degree, got a job in which you've kept for four years showing you're responsible. So what if you live with your parents? It's not like you mooch off them entirely. I've also read not one but three or four articles within the last year about how kids are staying with their parents longer now days, so you're normal. And if I may say so myself, I think it's smart to stick around until you're done with college. You'll likely have more confidence (and money) when you're ready to move out on your own, so you'll start out with solid footing. And so what about watching animated shows and spending a lot of time on the computer? This is the 21st century after all. What should really matter is that you've got friends (even if you've never met some of them in person, they're still real people), and you're doing what you enjoy. As with your brother, I'm wondering if he's trying to maybe impress someone, maybe a friend, or just someone he hopes to associate with in the future, possibly even himself. He might be embarrassed of his own life, admires what you're doing, and in feeling that it's just "not fair", is lashing out. And he's putting you down to help himself feel better. It's human nature. It might be a very frustrating situation for him. And the more frustrated and confused he gets, the uglier his attitude gets. So just try to be patient with him, and be careful in getting involved yourself. And take what he tells you with a grain of salt until he straitens out. Quote:
__________________
|
|
03-25-2008, 07:32 PM | #17 | |||||
The Best Character on the Show
|
Quote:
One thing you mention is that you don't have many friends, and to that, I have to ask, why? While having some multitude of friends certainly doesn't constitute being a necessity, the way you state this makes me think you don't believe yourself to have as many friends as you believe yourself to have. Is it because you're not outgoing, or because of your own personality, as, no offense M, but you tend to have INCREDIBLY extremist views and take a vitriolic attitude towards anyone who disagrees with them. What I'm getting at is this: that while a good deal of your decision to stick to being alone and sticking with anime, cartoons, and internet time is probably because you truly enjoy it, I'm wondering if some of it also isn't because you're afraid of genuinely socializing in the outside world. I ask this because I'm the same way, to a degree. Also, the whole thing about you living with your parents 23-24, that does eventually need to change. I don't think it says anything about you as a person that you're still living with your parents. However, you will have to move on eventually anyway. While you say later on that you're not still there simply because you're UNABLE to move, why is it you haven't? If you are capable, then you probably should. This is, of course, my own personal opinion, as I'm an incredibly cynical man, as well as my feelings once you have the power to be capable of doing something, you should do it and, when I get the money to, I intend to make sure my parents don't have the millstone of having to support me around their neck. But that's just me. Quote:
I don't believe there's anything necessarily wrong with your lifestyle. I don't feel your doing jack s**t with your life in that you have a job and are graduating from college (as little as I genuinely consider college meaning anything), which is at least showing your on track to starting a genuine career and becoming a productive member of society. At the same time, I don't see anything necessarily wrong with your brother's lifestyle, though I'm distressed to hear he's drinking fairly commonly at only 18. You have your way, and he has his. The problem, really, is only that he believes his to simply be superior to yours. Do as thou wilt, and that shall be the whole of the law. Quote:
Quote:
As for his current state....let him cool off for a bit. I know that may sound somewhat detached and cold, but confronting him at this current point in time will, in my experience, only make things worse. Quote:
__________________
|
|||||
03-25-2008, 07:46 PM | #18 |
The Postmaster
Love gives you courage that's stronger than anything!
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Saturn
Posts: 6,652
|
No offense taken. However, given the health effects of alchohol abuse and it's cost to society, I cannot judge it as anything other than inferior. I won't bore you with medical statistics or DWI stories; they're easy enough to find online. If we were talking about social drinking that would be another matter entirely and I have no problem with that, but based on Mr. M.'s description his brother's behaviour seems to have gone well beyond that.
|
03-26-2008, 03:50 AM | #19 | |
Executive Weasel Ball
jekylljuice was here.
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: the 44th floor (not counting the mezzanine)
Posts: 1,568
|
Quote:
In your case, Mr. M, there doesn't really sound like there's an awful lot for you to be jealous about. I'm about the same age as you, and I have absolutely no interest in hanging out at bars, drinking intoxicating substances which have no appeal to me. I'm much rather curl up with a good book or cartoon. I think the best advice I could give would be to stop giving a monkey's about what other people think and to get on with what feels right to you. Admittedly, I'm not always brilliant at following it (as Niles Crane once said, "It's one thing to give advice, it's another thing to take it"), but I do think that it's quite a solid little tip nonetheless.
__________________
That's it, The End, But you'll get over it, My Friend. Last edited by jekylljuice; 03-26-2008 at 05:19 AM. |
|
03-26-2008, 12:52 PM | #20 | |
Not-So-Hopeless Romantic
|
Quote:
You don't really know my views on religion, beliefs, morals, politics etc. I don't tell people my views to change their minds, I tell them my views so they can see what my mind sees. I don't expect anyone to believe what I say just as long as they listen to it which most people don't do, they tend to miss that. They assume I'm in a never ending battle to be "right" which is one of the things my brother strongly hates about me (I have done it but not as much as he makes it sound), I don't want to be right all the time I just want my brother and others to understand my views and why I feel this way/that way. Thirdly and most importantly and not to sound aggressive over this but I NEVER EVER said I wanted to be alone. It is not a decision its a state of being, at least for me it is. I don't want to be alone I HATE being alone and I HAVE tried socializing and I still do I just still end up spending a lot of the time at home either way. Nothing about my solitude has anything to do with choosing it, I don't want to be alone and I do want to socialize and I have been so I just want to make that clear. I'm not afraid to socialize what i am afraid is having to change my lifestyle to my brother's in order to further socialize because to me, that's not living. He's not a druggie or a super burnt out addict but I have some moral standards that exceed any worries about being alone. There are some things and some ways of life I would rather die alone then live under.
__________________
|
|