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Sibling

Future Planning: What Siblings Want You to Know

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When you grow up as the sibling of a child with a disability, you learn early that the future isnโ€™t something you can take for granted. While other kids daydream about college, careers, and where they might want to live someday, many of us are thinking about something very different: What will happen to my brother or sister when my parents are no longer able to take care of them?

Future planning is a topic families often postpone because it feels heavy, emotional, and overwhelming. But for siblings, itโ€™s not abstract. Itโ€™s woven into our identity, especially as we move into adulthood. And even if we donโ€™t always say it out loud, we are thinking about itโ€”often more than parents realize.

This post offers a sibling-centered perspective on future planning: what we worry about, what we hope for, and what we wish families would talk about sooner rather than later.


Road leading to the future

We Think About the Future Long Before Anyone Talks About It

Many siblings see themselves as future caregivers from a young age. We overhear conversations. We watch our parents advocate, schedule appointments, and juggle responsibilities. Even without being told, we sense that our siblingโ€™s future stability is tied to our familyโ€™s long-term plan.

Yet, despite how often we think about it, siblings are rarely invited into early planning discussions. By the time siblings finally join the conversationโ€”usually during a crisis or major transitionโ€”theyโ€™re already carrying years of silent worry.

What siblings wish families knew:
We want to be part of decision-making, and we want time to prepareโ€”not pressure to suddenly step into a role we were never asked about.


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Silence Creates Stressโ€”Information Creates Stability

One of the hardest parts of being a sibling is not knowing. Not knowing the plan. Not knowing financial details. Not knowing expectations. When thereโ€™s no roadmap, our imaginations fill the gapsโ€”and they usually fill them with fear.

Future planning doesnโ€™t mean deciding everything today. But it does mean making sure siblings know:

  • What legal and financial protections are in place
  • Who the current care team is
  • What supports their sibling receives
  • Their siblingโ€™s hopes, preferences, and daily routines
  • Who to call in an emergency

When families communicate openly, siblings feel more grounded and less overwhelmed. Itโ€™s not the responsibility itself that creates stressโ€”itโ€™s the uncertainty.


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We Want to Support Our Siblingโ€”but Not at the Cost of Our Own Lives

Many siblings already plan to play a meaningful role in their brother or sisterโ€™s life. We want to stay connected. We want to help with major decisions. Some of us picture ourselves taking on a caregiving role someday; others picture a more supportive, advocacy-based role.

But siblings also want the freedom to build a lifeโ€”career, relationships, family, financial independenceโ€”without feeling guilty or selfish for doing so.

A healthy future plan honors both realities:

  • Our siblingโ€™s right to stable, supported adulthood
  • Our right to our own autonomy and well-being

Clear planning makes it possible for siblings to stay present and involved without carrying everything alone.


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Planning Now Protects Everyone Later

Future planning isnโ€™t just about legal documentsโ€”though tools like supported decision-making agreements, special needs trusts, and ABLE accounts matter. Itโ€™s also about day-to-day continuity:

  • What medical and support needs does my sibling have?
  • How do they communicate best?
  • What routines matter most to them?
  • What brings comfort? What causes stress?
  • What goals do they have for their adult life?

Documenting this information ensures that if something unexpected happens, siblings arenโ€™t starting from zero. It also honors the person with a disability by centering their preferences, strengths, and identity.


The Best Gift Parents Can Give Siblings Is a Plan

At its heart, future planning is an act of love. It says:

We donโ€™t expect you to do this alone.
We want your sibling to have a stable, supported life.
We want you to have your own life too.

When families create a planโ€”early, openly, and with input from everyoneโ€”it lifts an enormous emotional weight off siblingsโ€™ shoulders. It allows us to show up in ways that feel meaningful, sustainable, and rooted in love rather than obligation.


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Moving Forward Together

Future planning isnโ€™t a one-time conversation. Itโ€™s a process that grows as the family grows. Siblings donโ€™t need every detail figured outโ€”but we do need communication, transparency, and collaboration.

Because at the end of the day, siblings want the same thing parents want:
a future where our brother or sister is supported, valued, and able to live a meaningful life.

And we want a future where we can remain part of their livesโ€”out of connection, not fear.

If this topic resonates with you, I created a simple, practical tool to help.

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