The hardest conversation about caregiving is rarely with the parent. It’s with the brother who lives three states away, or the sister who calls every Sunday but hasn’t visited in eight months.
Start with facts, not feelings
Open the call with numbers, not grievances. Hours per week. Out-of-pocket dollars. Specific tasks: meds at 8am, 12pm, 6pm; bath on Tuesdays and Fridays; doctor appointments. When the picture is concrete, the conversation stops being about who feels what and starts being about what needs to happen.
Name what you’re asking for
“I need help” is a feeling. “I need you to cover four hours every other Saturday, or contribute $400 a month toward respite care” is a request. Pick one. You can negotiate from there.
Expect resistance, not refusal
Most siblings don’t refuse outright — they delay. “Let me think about it.” “Let me check with my partner.” That’s normal. Set a follow-up date in the same conversation: “Can we talk again next Tuesday at 7?” If the next call doesn’t happen, you have your answer, and you can plan around it.
Get it in writing
Even an email summary is enough. “Confirming what we agreed: you’ll Venmo $400 on the 1st of each month, and I’ll handle the schedule with the agency.” Memory drifts. Email doesn’t.

