Updated 3/1/2026
If you’re experiencing caregiver resentment toward your siblings, it rarely shows up as explosive anger.
It shows up quietly.
You notice you’re doing more.
Managing more.
Thinking about it more.
You are the one remembering appointments, tracking medications, following up on details. Others may care deeply, but they are not carrying the same weight.
You may never say it out loud.
But you feel it.
In many families, caregiving roles are never formally discussed. Responsibility settles instead of being assigned.
One sibling becomes the coordinator.
Another becomes the occasional helper.
Another stays at a distance.
No one plans it this way. It just happens.
Over time, that uneven distribution becomes harder to ignore. Not because you want credit, but because you feel the imbalance in your daily life.
For many caregivers dealing with resentment toward siblings, the most difficult part is not anger. It is the loneliness of holding the full picture while staying quiet about it.
When resentment has no outlet, it turns inward.
You may question yourself for feeling this way.
You might think:
They have their own responsibilities.
At least someone is managing things.
Maybe I’m overreacting.
So instead of addressing it, you minimize it. You continue handling tasks. You tell yourself it’s easier this way.
And yet, the feeling remains.
That’s because resentment is often a signal that expectations were never clearly defined.
When roles are unspoken, responsibility expands unevenly. The sibling who steps forward most consistently becomes the default leader, and eventually the default carrier.
Feeling caregiver resentment toward siblings does not mean:
It often means you’ve been carrying more than your share in a structure that was never clarified.
Resentment isn’t weakness. It’s information.
It tells you something needs to be rebalanced.
Most caregivers aren’t asking, “Why am I so resentful?”
They’re asking something more practical:
Why does this feel like it’s all on me?
And how do I address it without blowing up the family?
That question deserves more than reassurance. It deserves structure.
Because caregiver resentment toward siblings rarely resolves through silence. It resolves when responsibilities are defined, expectations are clarified, and conversations shift from emotion to logistics.
If this tension feels familiar, the Conversation Guide, What to Say When You’re Resentful Toward Your Siblings, walks you through how to:
This is not about confrontation.
It is about replacing quiet resentment with clear responsibility.
Because resentment doesn’t disappear on its own.
But it does lessen when structure improves.
https://checkout.theagingsociety.com/caregiver-resentment-siblings/?utm_source=blog&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=rqra

Susan Myers is a Mom, Caregiver Strategist, and founder of The Aging Society. She helps family caregivers get the clarity they need to navigate aging parent care without losing themselves in the process. Her courses, resources, and Caregivers: Talk With Purpose podcast offer grounded, practical support for the moments that feel overwhelming, confusing, or heavier than expected.
The Aging Society helps caregivers navigate conversations and decisions about senior care with clarity, confidence, and ease.

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