A Recycled Post for 11/13/2021
Grandparenting 7/5/09
It has been awhile since last this space was used,
but time flies quickly for grandparents who are confused. Summertime is for
children and grandparents, not for blogs.
Grandparenting
Somewhere in the hall of fame for strange
critters, the grandparent must have a place. He or she feels responsible for
the little darlin’s while enjoying the realization that the situation is
generally temporary. The hall of fame has several categories of
grandparents; so for the edification of those who have yet to experience one of
life’s final ironies, the following enumeration of their characteristics is
offered.
The all-permissive grandparent may be either
male or female, but the entire idea behind being permissive is to allow the
grandchild/ren to go home and tell the parents that ANYTHING is permissible at
Granddad’s or Grandmother’s house. Candy, late hours, bouncing on the bed
in the back bedroom, coffee in the morning with the grandparents, just about
anything not allowed at home is allowed by these grandparents. We won’t go
into the reasoning behind this kind of grandparenting because some mothers and
fathers feel that an insidious—if not vicious—delight is expressed when their
children are allowed non-standard child fare or activities.
The “we will buy it for you” grandparents may be
about the most dangerous type in existence. Children who inherit this type
of grandparent will have considerable difficulty in learning to value doing
things the hard way or earning their own treasures. Parents who must deal
with the grandparents must find a way to manage their frustrations and their
children at the same time. Only if the grandparents can be persuaded to
invest in long-term values like education or real properties will the goodness
of their intentions have worth to the grandchildren or parents.
The most blessed children are those who have
grandparents who will share their stories of growing up and a history of their
own family. Children don’t see themselves as their parents do, so a
grandparent’s memories can shed insight upon both the child and the grandchild
when traditions are involved. The story about the daughter asking her mom
why she always cut the roast edges off before putting it all in the pan
illustrates one of the funnier traditions. The mother couldn’t tell her
daughter why she cut the roast up in that way except that she always had seen
HER mother do it that way. The mother called the great grandmother and
asked her why she cut the roast up before putting it in the pot. The
answer was simple: HER pot was not big enough for the full roast to spread
out.
Our parents knew us as children. Their
memories bear repeating for all concerned. We had grandchildren before we
ever heard of the term ADHD, but now we understand why our parents thought
their children were scatter-brained and never still. And believe it or
not, we were well-behaved, good children. But the world we lived in had
very little resemblance to that of today. We rode real bikes with one
speed—whatever our legs would pump up. We rode all over town without our
mom worrying about us. The neighbors all knew us and had us run errands
for them. Our toys included hop toads, horny toads, grass lizards, and
June bugs. We played in the rain, got muddy, got dirty, got hot, and got
cold with the seasons. And all the time we had parents and grandparents
who loved us and cheered us on. We were so blessed to have both.
If a child has even one grandparent, a certain
amount of history will come out about the child’s parent. But the best
part about having any kind of grandparent is seeing the continuity of life in a
family, from one generation to the next, with love.
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