
"My older daughter got into a car accident while driving my younger daughter's car. The damage amounted to a few thousand dollars, and my older daughter did not want to pay for it. I offered to cover the expenses in hopes that it would settle the dust between them, but it didn't. My youngest feels that her sister should've at least offered to help cover the costs and accuses her sister of always being careless."
"Why are you ready to sweep your older daughter's irresponsibility under the rug? If she had an accident, she should pay for it. Her sister is absolutely right about this. It is time to hold your older daughter accountable. Has this type of thing happened before? Perhaps your youngest daughter is fed up with you taking care of her sister's mistakes."
An older daughter crashed her younger sister's car, causing several thousand dollars in damage; the older daughter refused to pay. The parent offered to cover repairs hoping to reconcile the siblings, but the younger daughter remained resentful and accused her sister of repeated carelessness and having to clean up her messes. Recommended response: hold the older daughter financially accountable and examine whether her behavior is a recurring pattern of irresponsibility. A separate situation describes a chronically late colleague who delayed a group, caused missed reservations, and failed to apologize, prompting a need to address habitual tardiness directly.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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