I don’t put up with those who treat generosity like a natural trait or who see it as weakness. I realised it was time to give my sister a lasting lesson in boundaries when she began to treat me like her own babysitter.
Has there ever been someone in your life who simply thought they had all of your time? Someone who considered your situation and concluded that since you didn’t meet their definition of “busy,” you were always available? In a nutshell, it is my sister Daphna.
My name is Amy. Yes, I am single and I work from home. My sister Daphna, who is thirty-two, has two boys: young Tyler, who recently turned three, and Marcus, who is six. She moved into a house two blocks from mine after getting divorced approximately a year ago. I initially thought it would be wonderful to have her close by. The boys could come over, we could go out for coffee, you know, typical sister stuff.
That chat from August ought to have been my first red flag.
When Daphna mentioned her daycare problem, we were sitting on my front porch, sweltering while sipping iced tea.
She grabbed my hand and squeezed it. “You’re the best sister ever. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
I ought to have received that in writing.
It occurred for the first time on a Tuesday in late August. At 5:40 a.m., my doorbell rang, even though my alarm wasn’t set to go off for another hour. With my hair sticking up in all directions, I got out of bed and answered the door.
Tyler and Marcus were standing there holding plush animals in their dinosaur pyjamas. Marcus was wearing his green T. Tyler’s Triceratops were blue. They appeared bewildered and half sleepy.
“Auntie Amy!” Marcus exclaimed in a tiny, unsure voice.
Daphna’s words echoed brightly from the driveway. “Got an early morning yoga class! You’re a lifesaver!”
I was about to reply when her white SUV started to back out, its taillights fading as it turned the corner.
Don’t text. Not a warning. Not at all “Is this okay?”
Before dawn, there were only two children at my door.
I glanced down at the lads. Tyler was using his tiny fists to massage his eyes. With a mumble, “I’m hungry,”
I sighed and moved aside. “Come on in,” I said. “Let’s find you some breakfast.”
As the boys took their seats on my couch, I texted Daphna, saying, “A heads-up would’ve been nice.”
Sorry! Last-minute thing. You’re amazing! Heart emoji, heart emoji,” was her response two hours later.
My doorbell rang at 5:38 a.m. the following morning.
With the same toy dinosaurs in their hands, my nephews met me at the door in their pyjamas. My sister’s vehicle was also moving away.
Daphna yelled, “This is just for today,” “Promise!”
The following day, she did this again. And the day after that.
By the second week, I’d stopped being startled. I just started setting my alarm earlier, keeping extra milk in the fridge, and moving my morning meetings to 10 instead of nine.
My routine became their routine. Before my first video call, I would make peanut butter toast, look through the bag Daphna threw on my porch for matching socks, and try to get the kids settled with cartoons.
Every morning, my coffee would get cold. My job suffered. I was joining client meetings late, apologizing for background noise, attempting to concentrate while two youngsters battled about who got the blue cup.