Are Grandparents Important?

I was only 44 when my first grandchild was born. I assured my daughter that I wanted to be mother to the mother and that I did not want to take over her child. I saw my role as helping the next generation raise their children and I think that this is an important role for a grandparent. I gave the same assurance to my daughter in law. Both women were happy to receive my assistance, both financial and supportive.

I have developed a special relationship with each of my six grandchildren over their growing years. All have enjoyed coming to my house for visits and overnight stays. I have been their transport, especially during school holidays, and I have attended significant school events when their parents could not take time off work. I took them to the movies and other entertainments and later they invited me to join them when new episodes of Star Wars or movies like Avatar were screening. There is a sign in my kitchen that says "Grandma's Kitchen - kids eat free" and even today these grown up grandchildren enjoy a family meal at our house.

One granddaughter has special needs due to a genetic disability and we are especially close. I am part of her support network as she learns to live independently, manage her finances and seek employment. For as long as I live I will continue to help her mother by helping the grand daughter. All of the others are now independent adults and I get on well with their various partners. I see them a lot less now but that is how it should be. I know that they love me as a very significant other and when we all get together they show it. They allow me to be a friend on their Facebook pages and lol at some of my entries. On FB I have a new persona - I am G'ma and I am 'cool'.

I have few memories of my own grandparents. My maternal grandmother died the year before I was born and all I have of her are stories. Her husband was my special granddad. For almost the first three years of my life he was my father substitute because Dad was away in the war. He took me for walks with the dog, bought me ice creams and made me dolls' furniture in his workshop. He grew Iceland poppies in his garden and paid me theepence not to open the buds prematurely. I was always curious to see what colour petals were hidden inside each bud.

I remember him when he was very ill, shortly before he died. He was asleep on a couch in the sun on the closed verandah of my aunt's home. I looked at his old, gnarled hands and had a sense of connectedness that I remember to this day. His old hands and my 13 year old hands were the same - same proportions, same fingernail shape and so on. I have my grandfather's hands and now mine are old too.

On my father's side his parents lived in the same street as us but there was never any emotional connection at all. Granddad was ill with silicosis of the lungs and all I remember of him was a racking cough. I'm told that he was a kind man but I was never close enough to discover this for myself. Grandma was not the warm and loving kind and I never connected with her either. She called me cold but I don't think that I was the problem. I regret not having reached out to her when I was grown up because I think she had had a hard life.

What I learnt about grandparenting was the result of watching my mother and mother in law relate to their children's children and to their children's partners. These women were generous with their time and love and helped me and my children. Both passed away loved by everyone in their family circle. I hope I do the same when my time comes.
 
My wife and I are trying to be good grandparents from afar, with my son and his wife living over in England, so the in-person visits are few and far between. The two weeks we got to spend with them in June were really special. My grandson is four years old so I think we're just making memories for him every time we chat over the computer. My granddaughter is only 2 and a half, so she's just getting to know us. Still, when we visited in June we took every opportunity to bond with them.

I think what we will be striving in our retirement years to build a close bond and trying to teach them more about our side of the family. This is especially important to us as our son has already told us he does not expect his marriage to survive. We are already sending letters, pictures and making sure the calls are frequent enough so that they know us. My little grandson warmed my heart on last Sunday's call when my face came on the screen and he immediately gave me a big smile and called out "Hi Grandpa!" God I love those kids.
 
To me this is an unusual question. I come from a multigenerational family. A great great grandfather was still alive when I was a baby. I think I remember him as a really old scary guy. I do remember his funeral. I knew four of my great grandparents. We lived on a farm that has been in the family since 1789.There were 3 houses on the property and grandmas house was the nerve center of the "compound" Today I see my grandchildren and great grandson several times a week,my father is also a big factor in all of our lives as the family patriarch. He is know as Grandpa to my children and Poppies daddy to their children.
We have always been a close knit sometimes clannish group and all members are a vital part of who we are.
We have a family cemetery on the property that goes back to the beginning so the sense of continuity is strong and I hope for it to remain so for at least a couple of more generations.
 
I believe grandparents pay an important role in our grandchildren's lives. I had a very special Grandmother who gave all of us total love. I always knew that no matter what Grandma was there for me. She was the one I went to many times as I was growing up with problems that I didn't feel comfortable sharing with my parents. I still cherish her memory and share stories about her with my grandchildren. She was fun. I try to be the grandma she was to me to my grandchildren.
 
I never knew my grandparents so I can't say. After getting married, we moved to the other end of the UK, so the children never had much contact with their grandparents either. The only things I sort of miss are the local and 'mumming' rhymes that my father recited.
 
I had a bit of a rough upbringing. I was born during WW2 in London, and the bombs were falling thick and fast. At nine months old, I was adopted, and sent out of London as a wartime child for my own safety. Most of the kids were sent to lovely peaceful places such as Somerset or Cornwall - I was sent to Liverpool, and bombed to buggery. During the following years, I had a total of 7 mothers and 8 fathers. Hey, don't feel sorry for me - I was as happy as a pig in poo.

The only grandmother I can remember was between the ages of eleven and fifteen. She was a little woman, always dressed in black, preferred to live in her own room upstairs, and was absolutely ancient - she was 70 years old! She could remember the days before cars and aeroplanes, and proudly remembered seeing Queen Victoria on a street parade.

Everyday, I would go into her room and we would play whist. I used to win all of the time. She could never understand how I knew which cards to save and which to discard - and thought I had some psychic gift. She went to her grave without knowing my secret, and I still feel guilty about it to this day.....
I used to look at her cards through the reflection in her glasses.

Oh how I wish I had spent more time asking her about her childhood and her memories.
 
Oh how I wish I had spent more time asking her about her childhood and her memories.

I can recall a long, fascinating conversation with my wife's grandparents before they passed. We were at a family event in their daughter's home. As both grandparents rested on the bed, we slowly came to learn about how they fled Hitler's Germany (sadly, many of his family dismissed the grandfather's concerns about Hitler and died as a result) and ended up here in America. They left everything behind to start a new life here. A fascinating look back in time; info they had never shared with my wife until that day. It is a story that we have since passed on to our son and will no doubt share with our grandchildren when they're old enough.
 
my grandparents were very important to me because they were family. We saw them as much as we possibly could. Even as we hit that age where our parents were not cool to hang with, we still went to see my grandparents once a week. Family is family... all are important. My children have a great relationship with their grandparents (on my side that is) because they are still actively involved with them. Family dinners, making wine, camping, and just general gatherings.
NOW however (sadly) my own grand children are being raised very differently. Because they live with "the other parent" and come from a broken family we do not get to see them unless there is a monetary or material gain.... Birthdays and Christmas. The parent they live with fails to see the importance of ALL grandparents so we loose out.
 
Absolutely grandparents are important! My parents tried best they could, but going to my Poppy's house was magical. I wish I could have been older and found out more about him. He was a blacksmith for many years, back in the days with an open shop. Bet he had a whole book of stories to tell. To me he was just Poppy and I loved him the way he was. There were times they had to drag me out of his house screaming. His house was a vacation from being bullied at school and being an only kid...brother was ten years older and married, virtually an only kid.
 
I never knew any grandparents. The only grandparent figure I had was my stepfathers mother and my mother hated her.

I believe now that my mother resented that my stepfathers mother was still alive and her mother died when she was about 20. I remember my mother was beyond unsympathetic when my step father's mother died.
 
I had two grandmothers, my grandfathers having both died before I was born in 1950. My maternal grandmother was important to me, she took no prisoners but we got on very well, although some of her other grandchildren found her a bit scary, as she wasn't touchy feely. My paternal grandmother was a sadist, evil old b*tch whom I couldn't stand.:mad: She beat religion into her own kids, and frightened me from the age of two with stories the tortures of hell which awaited naughty little girls like me! Unfortunately she didn't have the decency to die before she was 96, it is a pity someone didn't put a pillow over her face.

My husband and I try to be good grandparents, although I must admit it is good to have the kids in small doses as they can be tiring.


Sounds like your one grandmother gave very good lessons on how not to be a grandmother!
 
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