You figured it would always be this way — you, all your brothers and sisters plus their kids, gathering for holidays or summer barbecues much the way you did when your parents were alive.
But without your dad, who died a dozen years ago, or your mom, who passed away last year, such sibling gatherings have dwindled. You barely talk to your brother. Your sisters, once in awhile.
Blame some of this on the normal changes in a family's dynamic that come with high school, college, marriages and household moves. Usually a family can weather what Philadelphia psychologist Marjory Levitt calls this "development arc in sibling relationships."
But sometimes, it doesn't. If the deceased parent was the glue holding the family together, which may come as a shock to some siblings who never realized a parent played that role, how each family navigates this new relationship territory is "infinitely variable," says Levitt.
"There is no one resolution or lack of resolution. And sometimes what looks like an idyllic resolution after the loss of parents turns sour. Sometimes there are latent jealousies and unresolved conflicts," says Levitt, an associate professor in Temple University's department of psychological, organizational and leadership studies in education. "And one sibling or more than one sibling can carry a sense of injustice about how they were treated.
"It's complicated. I counsel siblings, and it can really be unbelievable. All of a sudden there are 3-year-olds in the room. They are all dressed up and they drive cars, but the conflicts are ancient."
Many kinds of issues
Such sibling squabbling is not the same as sibling rivalries over who's better at basketball or Scrabble, says New York psychotherapist Jeanne Safer. It's sibling strife.
"Sibling strife is the conflict that goes on into adulthood. It usually has to do with parental preferences and favoritism," says Safer, the author of "Cain's Legacy: Liberating Siblings From a Lifetime of Rage, Shame, Secrecy and Regret" (Basic Books). "That sets up often terrible things going on between siblings later in life. You know the 'Mom loves you best' thing? People don't get over this at the age of 80, long after Mom is dead.