You should have a open conversation with your brother earlier, but things already happened. No need to blame yourself, It's not your fault, I would do just the same.
You can try to find out what really happened, ask his friends, someone should know.
If u know what really going on than u can make further decision
I Refused to Lend My Brother More Money, and Now I Regret It

Family boundaries are difficult to maintain, especially when money is involved. What starts as a simple refusal can uncover secrets no one expected. Our Bright Side reader, Daniel (M, 36) wrote to us about how a simple ’no’ changed his relationship with his brother.
Here’s his letter:

Dear Bright Side,
My brother and I were close growing up. He made me laugh. He protected me and I trusted him. But somewhere along the way things changed. Bad decisions turned into patterns, and those patterns turned into habits.
The start of a pattern.
The first time he asked for money, I did not think much of it. Everyone needs help sometimes. The second time felt different. The third time became routine.
Eventually, helping him stopped feeling like support and started feeling like I was enabling a version of him I did not recognize. Every time I loaned him money, he promised to pay it back. He never did.
I learnt to say ’no’.
One evening, he called and asked for money again. The request was familiar. But something in me was tired. I told him no. I expected disappointment. Instead, I got anger.
He called me selfish. He said I turned my back on family. Then he hung up and blocked me. Part of me felt guilty. Part of me felt relief. Mostly, I felt done.
Then everything took a turn.
A week passed. Then my mother called. Her voice did not sound frustrated. It sounded frightened.
She told me strangers had come to her house looking for my brother. They knocked on her door. They stood in her driveway. They asked questions. That’s when she told me something I had never known.
The truth comes out.
Turns out, my brother was not asking for the money for himself. He had borrowed from the wrong people trying to fix something. He did not tell her what. He just said he would handle it himself, but he clearly had not.
I had to find him.
I called all my brother’s friends and finally found him. I went over to speak to him. He looked different. Not angry. Not defensive. Just tired. He said, “I messed up. I am scared.”
He told me he never planned for things to escalate. He thought he could solve it quietly without dragging the family into his mess. He was ashamed, and he did not know how to ask for help without destroying the version of himself he wanted us to believe in. For the first time in months, we had a real conversation.
But it’s just the beginning.
That was the last time I spoke to him. He said he needed to disappear for a while and not to find him. Now, my brother is unreachable, and I’m left wondering whether saying no protected me...or put us all in danger.
Daniel
Thank you for sharing this with us. This is definitely a tough situation to navigate, here are some helpful tips to keep in mind:
- Do not punish yourself with guilt. You made the best choice with the information you had.
It is easy to look back and think you should have known or done something differently. But you cannot predict someone else’s hidden struggles or the consequences of secrets they choose to protect. You said no because past behavior taught you that saying yes only made things worse.
- Your brother is an adult, and adults are responsible for the outcomes of their choices.
You are not a parent to him. It is not your job to fix his mistakes or shield him from reality. He had opportunities to communicate openly, involve the family and choose better paths long before things escalated. His situation may be frightening, complicated or emotional, but it is still the result of decisions he made. It’s important not to enable his behavior.
- Not every crisis is yours to carry, even when it involves family.
There is a difference between compassion and self-sacrifice. Loving someone does not require you to abandon yourself every time they fall apart. You can care, you can show up, and you can help within healthy limits. But you are not required to destroy your peace, finances or emotional wellbeing just to hold someone else together.
Sometimes you need to take a stand, even with siblings. Read this story: I Refuse to Let My Sister Step Inside the Home I Bought for My Parents, and I’m Not Sorry.
Comments
I lost a brother to drugs, when he was 60 years old. My sister paid off his dealers, more than once, when he WAS A LOT YOUNGER. He died because of drugs, anyway. You can't drown yourself, keeping him afloat. You didn't do anything wrong, by turning him down. HE made his own choices. If there WAS a way to save him from himself, I am sure that you would have done it. I am praying for you and your family and especially for your brother. Don't make it worse, by putting yourself in danger.
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