(Sister Dating) What Should I Do??

OP already did that:

The OP already had that conversation. Though from the tone, it appears to have been a strident lecture rather than a conversation, which was promptly ignored.

While it is a good thing to care for and support family, “giving permission” and throwing tantrums crosses the line.

The sister could well be making a mistake. That happens. Assuming she’s in a state where age of consent is 16, it’s her mistake to make and learn from the experience.

If anything, the OP should have an honest conversation rather than lecturing. If that fails, it’s left to the OP to hope for the best and be there for support in case of the worst.

It’s impossible to protect everybody from everything that can possibly go wrong. It’s somewhat wrong to try - the sister won’t learn to properly deal with the same situation when she’s 26 or 36 and to be independent if she’s too sheltered at 16.

In most high population states, the age of consent is either 17 or 18. E.g. California, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Texas. So she probably lives in a state where it’s illegal.

Because this isn’t just an experimental “lets see how it goes” live and learn kind of thing. She isn’t seeing if working in retail is good and then if not ok it was a mistake lets find a desk job.

The consequences of this could be life altering. STDs, Pregnancy, thinking they’re in love and having devastating heartbreak, emotional abuse, physical abuse. These aren’t “lolz mistake” kinds of things that should be dismissed or regarded as such

I thought Xmas break was over.

Wait until they are about to go on vacation and then ask him to stay behind to discuss the family business. Then?
Have a long talk with him. Clear the air. And when you are done, make sure that there is a car outside that will take him to the airport. You’ll call your sister to tell her what flight he’s on.

Make sure you leave him with the phrase, “Get out of my Sight.”

If only there was a way for the OP to return to the thread to answer these many, many questions…

Yep, that was my first thought as well.

So you just assume that she is stupid (with a 4.2 GPA) and that her brother knows best and is being honest in his assessment. :smack: You know, the guy who hasn’t returned to the thread; he knows what is best for his sister. He just comes across as sounding jealous to me along with a better than thou attitude. From the picture he painted I’d trust her more than him.

For one I would not push her to break up with him or be-little him in any way. This will just make her want him more. Young girls are extremely stubborn. And have a tendency for know-it-allism. Let her make her own mistakes.

You could challenge him to a game of chicken in your convertible hot rods. Then your outcomes are:

-you chicken first, and he gets to date your sister.
-he chickens first, and your sister doesn’t even want to date such a cowardly guy.
-one of you tries to bail out but too late, and dies romantically.
-if he’s dead, she’ll mourn him, but eventually find another guy.
-if you’re dead, she’ll stay with him, but cherish your memory.
-neither one of you bails out, and you both die.

In most of these outcomes, he’s not dating your sister anymore.

Maybe they don’t have hot rods. A switchblade fight with highly stylized choreography is a much more affordable alternative that offers the same outcomes.

How does someone achieve a 4.2 gpa? Just curious…

My high school had a 9 point scale. Probably some high schools have a 5 point scale, and many other variations.

Oh, you mean they live in an ethnic neighborhood? Yeah, maybe your suggestion is better. Even if they have hot rods, it’s a long way to Dead Man’s Curve from the inner city.

It’s not impossible. The valedictorian from my mother’s college graduating class had a higher than 4.0 average. She had a dual major and graduated ahead of schedule by going to school full-time all year round. I reacted the same as you when I heard her gpa announced at the commencement ceremony. The department chair apparently anticipated this and gave a brief explanation. IIRC, it ammounted to them giving this workaholic extra weight for some of her classes due to the crazy workload + accelerated time frame.

Just keep it casual - catch a movie, a concert, a little over-the-shirt action…

AP classes weight a point higher, most commonly. So you get some 5s averaged in for A’s, instead of 4s.

OP, I was your sister. More or less. Bright, good grades, everyone thought I was destined for great things. Took up with a 21 year old just after I turned 17. Ended up pregnant. While everyone else saw it as a tragedy, I secretly saw it as a blessed relief. I was too scared to go away to school, I didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life, and I didn’t have any idea how to figure it out. The baby was a perfect delaying tactic. I was able to put off deciding What I Want To Be When I Grow Up until I was 31, and really had some clue.

Do I suggest this path? No, not really. I love my son (now almost 22) and I’m glad he’s in my life, but if I was picking the easy path in life, this wouldn’t have been it.

If you want to help her, help her realize how awesome she is. Help her find her talents, her passions, her skills. Build up her self-confidence and her life skills and professional talents. Tell her everything about her that is true and amazing. I guarantee you this guy is telling her nice things. She may feel like he’s the only one who does, who accepts her for who she is. Show her that you do too. Will it make her break up with him? Probably not, if she’s really in love with him. But building her up to realize all her good qualities has a far better chance of empowering her than tearing her down and sending her to his shoulder to cry on.

Finally…find out what SHE wants. Just because you, your parents and everyone else think she should go to Big Name School doesn’t mean it’s what she wants, or what’s the best choice for her. Really, for the first two years of college, it doesn’t matter where you go. Big Name Schools are largely a waste of money.

nm

And the best part is, meeting her parents shouldn’t be too awkward.

It would make gift-giving at Christmastime simpler. And you’d probably never forget her birthday.