How responsible are you for the bad behavior of your family members? That's a question we all have to ask ourselves at one point or another, and there's no 100% correct answer to it. You might be the one who is always picking up the pieces when things fall apart with your family members, and that's an admirable thing to take on. It's equally admirable to stand strong in your conviction that you are responsible for yourself, your mistakes, your success, and nobody else's. Most of us fall somewhere in the middle of this dichotomy, and our attitudes towards our responsibilities vary between family members.
The young woman in this story decided she wasn't responsible for her brother-in-law's rowdy behavior in the airport. When she, her sister, her sister's 3 kids, and her sister's husband were at the airport to fly to their parent's house for Christmas, she decided to board despite her brother-in-law causing a ruckus so large he prevented himself from boarding.
The young woman in this story decided she wasn't responsible for her brother-in-law's rowdy behavior in the airport. When she, her sister, her sister's 3 kids, and her sister's husband were at the airport to fly to their parent's house for Christmas, she decided to board despite her brother-in-law causing a ruckus so large he prevented himself from boarding.