Grief and loss
A sibling was supposed to be your longest relationship — someone who knew you from the beginning. When that ends, or when it was never right, the loss sits in a complicated place.
Siblings carry a particular weight in how we imagine family. They're the people who share your history from the beginning — who know the childhood, the parents, the house. When that relationship becomes estranged, it's not just the current relationship you lose. It's the imagined sibling, the one who was supposed to be there, who understood where you came from. The loss is both present and retroactive.
And because the relationship is supposed to be permanent, the estrangement can feel like a failure — of them, of you, of the family. This shame and ambivalence often makes it hard to talk about, even with people you trust.
Sibling estrangement tends to resurface at every family occasion — funerals, parents' illnesses, weddings, milestones. The estrangement has to be navigated or explained. You have to decide whether to attend, how to behave, what to say to other family members. These occasions are exhausting precisely because they combine the original loss with the practical management of it.
Afterward, the grief often resurfaces — the grief of what was or might have been, the grief of the family you wanted versus the one you have.
Mindfuse is an anonymous voice call with a real person. You can speak about the sibling relationship — what went wrong, what you grieve, the ambivalence of loving someone you can't be around — to someone who has no stake in the family dynamics. No account, no history. First conversation free. €4/month. iOS and Android.
Anonymous voice. Real person. Just someone to hear your side without agenda.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android