Entitled 30-year-old expects independent little sister to let them move in rent-free after quitting a stable job and squandering their savings on a flopped business endeavor; sister refuses: 'I worked hard for my stability'

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  • I refuse to let my older sister move into my apartment after she emptied her savings to start an online business

    Woman pleading with her sister.
  • I (25F) rent a small two- bedroom apartment that I share with no one. I've been working full-time since graduating college and finally got to a point where I can afford my own
  • place. It's not huge, but it's peaceful, and I really value. having my own space. My older sister (30F) has always been more impulsive. She recently
  • decided she was unhappy at her job and wanted to become a full-time lifestyle influencer. She quit her stable position, used most of her savings to pay for branding photos, a website,
  • marketing courses, and a bunch of equipment, and announced she was "betting on herself.” At first, she was posting constantly and seemed confident it would take off
  • quickly. But after about four months, she hadn't made much money. Sponsorships didn't come through the way she expected, and she burned through the rest of her
  • savings covering rent and expenses. Last month, she told me she couldn't renew her lease. Her plan now is to "cut expenses completely"
  • and focus full-time on growing her platform. She asked if she could move into my apartment for six to eight months, rent-free, while she builds her brand.
  • Blonde woman influencer streaming online.
  • She says she'd help around the apartment and "contribute when she can," but she made it clear she can't commit to paying a set amount.
  • The problem is, I work from home three days a week, and the second bedroom is my office. If she moved in, I'd lose that space. I'd also lose a lot of privacy. She
  • Woman struggling to work at her home office.
  • tends to stay up late filming content, FaceTiming friends, and playing music. We've clashed before when we've lived together.
  • I told her I wasn't comfortable with that. I offered to help her look for a cheaper room to rent, co-sign somewhere smaller, or even lend her
  • I some money to help with a deposit. But I said I don't want to share my apartment long-term, especially when the situation resulted from her quitting her job without a backup plan.
  • She got really upset and said I'm unsupportive and jealous that she's "taking risks" while I'm playing it safe. My parents are also pressuring me, saying
  • family should help family and that I'm young and "don't need that much space."
  • I feel guilty, but at the same time, I worked hard for my stability. I didn't make the choice to quit a steady job without savings. AITA for saying no?
  • Practical-Elk-3158 If your parents are so concerned about her housing, they are welcome to offer her a room in their home or contribute to her rent elsewhere.
  • smilineyz Shows how childish the elder sister is and how the parents are CLEAR they don't want to be involved!
  • Parents could offer an attic or basement ... or spare room but then they know what chaos the sister brings.
  • Beautiful Arm8364 Gotta admire the chutzpah of a lifestyle influencer who doesn't actually have a lifestyle. You shouldn't have to pay for her terrible choices.
  • Big-Engineering2353 OP I didn't tell her to quit. I didn't tell her to spend her savings. I supported her emotionally the whole time. I just can't financially and physically absorb the fallout now.
  • Beautiful Arm8364 Exactly. She did that all by herself. Terrible choices. She could have started building a following in her downtime from work to see if she could even do it.
  • Nobody just blows everything up and assumes they'll be as successful influencer from the jump.
  • Salty-Cantaloupe6342 She didn't lose her job or face an emergency, she chose to quit and gamble on a high risk plan. There's nothing wrong with taking risks, but part of that is
  • accepting the consequences if it doesn't work out. You're not her backup plan just because you were responsible.
  • Big-Engineering2353 OP Thank you. That's exactly what's been so hard to articulate. I don't resent her for chasing something bigger, I just don't understand why I'm expected to absorb the fallout when it didn't work out.

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