Kick your brother out, telling him that he needs to find his own place. Tell him that you need his room for the home health aide you need to help you care for your mother. Or tell him you need to rent out the room for the added income to afford home health care for your mother. Either way, you will be able to provide the care for your mother that your brother is unwilling to give.
My Brother Refuses to Help Our Sick Mom—So I Gave Him a Brutal Wake-Up Call

You ever hit that point where you’re doing everything for a sick parent while your sibling just sits around pretending it’s “not their job”? The author of this story finally snapped and gave her brother a wake-up call he’ll never forget, and now she’s split on whether she went too far or just did what had to be done.
Dear Bright Side,
I live with my unemployed 26-year-old brother to help our sick mom. He keeps saying it’s not his job to care for her. Yesterday, when I asked him to help me bring our mom upstairs, he rolled his eyes and slammed his door.
That was the last drop, so I finally decided to teach him a lesson he couldn’t ignore. I packed my things, left a note on the kitchen counter that said, “Since it’s not your job, I quit mine,” and walked out. No calls, no texts. Just silence.
By the next morning, his phone started blowing up, not from me, but from Mom’s care nurse. Turns out, she’d fallen trying to get to the bathroom alone. Nothing too serious, thank God, but enough to shake him. He called me over and over, but I didn’t answer.
When I finally came back that night, he was sitting beside her bed, quiet and guilty, helping her eat soup. He looked like a different person—or maybe just someone who finally saw what I’d been carrying all this time.
Now he’s been helping out more, but the tension’s thick. I don’t trust that it’ll last. Part of me feels bad for what I did; another part thinks it was the only way he’d ever wake up.
Was I too harsh, or did he need that reality check?
— Emily
Our suggestions for Emily:
- Stop expecting the “fair” version of help. Some people just don’t show up the way you think they should. Waiting for them to change only drains you. Accept it first, then decide what to do about it.
- Document quietly. Not to “catch” anyone, but to keep your own head straight. When you’re tired and resentful, details blur. Notes help when the guilt creeps in.
- Outside help isn’t failure. Whether it’s a visiting nurse, a community caregiver, or even a friend who drops by, it’s okay to share the weight. Nobody gets a medal for burning out.

What makes you think she has the authority to kick him out of the place, the OP doesn't say the place is hers, it's probably the mums and would be her decision.
- Calm conversations work better than explosions. Slamming doors feel great in the moment, but calm, short talks actually stick. Keep it factual.
- Give consequences without fanfare. Sometimes people need to see what “no help” really looks like. You don’t need to threaten; just stop cushioning the impact.
- Take care of yourself before you snap. It sounds cliché, but caregiver fatigue is brutal. Go outside. Watch a dumb show. Don’t martyr yourself.
- Find your outlet. Whether it’s therapy, Reddit, journaling, or a group chat with other caregivers, you need somewhere to put all that frustration that isn’t your family.
- Start with small, manageable tasks. If your sibling struggles with big responsibilities, assign one small duty at a time and gradually increase involvement.
- Teach, don’t just order. Show them exactly how to do lifts, meds, or feeding, a lot of “I can’t” excuses are really “I don’t know how.”

You had to give your brother a wakeup call. But did it have to be at your mother's expense? What if she got seriously hurt or worse? How would you feel then? What if your brother goes back to his old ways? Do you plan to punish your mother again? Find a different avenue. If it's too much for you, which I understand, then perhaps a care home should be considered.
- Know when to step back long-term. You can’t carry the burden forever. Planning exit strategies ensures your health and Mom’s care don’t collapse together.
- Use small, unavoidable accountability tools. A shared chore calendar on the fridge or a phone app that pings him when it’s his turn, visual reminders beat moralizing.
This story shows how family duties can fall unfairly on one person, sometimes it takes a drastic wake-up call to get through. This mirrors another story where a woman refused to be her brother’s on-call babysitter just because she’s infertile. Read more here.
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