Niagara Falls Review e-edition

You can cut off brother but still help his son

Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationship questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: My brother and I have had an uneven relationship. He was the first-born — good-looking and whipsmart, but often too busy with his friends to even acknowledge me, the awkward kid seven years younger.

But, in his early 20s, my brother changed. He obsessed about losing his hair and became surly with me, as if it were my fault that I apparently don’t have that baldness gene.

He’s now 38, married 17 years to a devoted woman. They have a son, age nine. I love the boy and regularly visit him to kick a soccer ball around together and encourage his growing interest in music.

I’m 31, in a happy relationship with my girlfriend. But lately I feel uneasy that something ’s definitely going badly and affecting my brother. Normally, he earns a lot more than me, because he’s in real estate sales, which have been soaring during the pandemic.

Also, his wife has a steady good income from her home-based job. Meanwhile, I’m a high school teacher doing OK for our needs.

Yet lately my brother’s regularly asking to borrow money from me. Initially, it was $100 or so for something that my nephew needed — new running shoes, a ukulele, etc.

Lately it’s been more. He surprised me with a request for $2,000! My brother said he needed help with last month’s bills because they had to get a new air conditioner during the heat wave. His roof also needed repair.

I started to wonder just what he and his wife do with their earnings.

Years ago, my brother was playing the stock market beyond his means, and without much knowledge, and he lost a bundle. He borrowed from our parents back then, but Dad’s passed since and Mom lives on her pension.

Could he be doing this again and, if so, is it like an addiction?

I love my brother and would be happy to help as much as possible if there were true, unavoidable needs.

But, if he’s taking big gambles, I have to stop funding him. Also, I’m increasingly worried about how all this affects his son’s future. How do I handle this?

Worried Brother

A: It’s not easy to reason with someone who likes to take financial risks because they’ll always say that they’ll quit after the next big horse race, or a hot stock purchase that’s going to triple its worth, or, in this case, maybe he’s into some other get-rich-quick scheme.

Time to talk straight to him. You cannot afford to cover his losses.

Whatever he is overspending on, he’s going to have to figure out how to pay his debts on his own

If you wish, you can also set up a government-secured education fund for your nephew, in the boy’s name and yours only, to assure his future education. But don’t tell your brother about it.

Ask him what’s really going on, and tell him you’d love to discuss and help — but not financially.

FEEDBACK Regarding the “Unnoticed Wife” (Aug. 26):

“It’s possible that her husband (and the Unnoticed Wife) are as clueless as I was about how different people express and require love.

“My ex-husband had his own love language of ‘words of affirmation’ and I definitely do not.

“Although our marriage crumbled for many reasons, I wish I had known then about love languages.

“Perhaps I could have been a more supportive partner and also better explained to him what I needed. “Been there, didn’t do that.”

Ellie’s tip of the day

Get help, not money, for a gambling addict.

ARTS & LIFE

en-ca

2021-09-16T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-09-16T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://niagarafallsreview.pressreader.com/article/281745567518374

Toronto Star Newspapers Limited