Saturday, May 08, 2021

The Saturday Morning Post - Grandparents


I am on the editorial board of a monthly professional journal whose audience is older professionals, primarily age 62 and older.  The theme of the May issue is grandparenting.  I have never been a parent, hence I am not a grandparent.  My nephews were raised a long way away, so I didn't have the experience of substitute grandchildren.  So I really can't write on the experience of being a grandparent.  

This got me to thinking about my experience as a grandchild.  Grandparents had an influence, positive and negative on my life.  I was fortunate that all four of my grandparents lived into my middle teens or beyond, and my paternal, maternal great-grandmother outlived my grandfathers and I had a lot of contact with all of them.  

My family and my father's parents lived on the same farm, around the corner from one another.  When I was a baby, my mother's parents retired from farming, bought a large travel trailer and as they would describe it "went camping" for most of the rest of their lives. They would spend anything from a few weeks, to a few months each year literally in our backyard.  My great grandmother lived with my grandparents on the farm for several years giving the me the opportunity to spend hundreds of hours with her. My great grandmother was born in the 1880's, my grandparents in the very early 1900's, all were alive through World War I and World War II.  

My maternal grandparents were complex people. She was unhappy with her lot in life, often feeling distressed, hateful, and fearful.  He was unflappable, simple, and stubborn. He accepted his fate, would sooner go fishing than deal with the drama that was my grandmother.    They were married about 55 years, at times I sensed that they relied on one another, felt committed to one another, but didn't really like one another.  They held deep grudges, and seldom practiced forgiveness.  I learned how damaging that can be, how it gets in the way of personal happiness.  

My father's parents had started spending winters in Florida by the time I was born. They were a presence in my life 8 or 9 months out of the year.  By the time I was 6 or 7, I was allowed to cross the two fields, skip over the drainage ditch by stepping on the rock in the middle by the mulberry tree,  come out between the barn and the pool room and visit them.  

Being out in the country without many neighbors, my grandmother became one of my closest friends.  She was born near London, immigrated to the USA as a very young child. She had lived in New York, Chicago, Toledo and Detroit.  She as the closest to a high school graduate of all of my grandparents, being just a class or two short of finishing when her mother (the great grandmother in my life) was seriously burned in a kitchen accident. She took time off to care for her mother, and by the time she was ready to return to school, her father had a new job with a move to a new city, and she never returned to school.  She valued education, she read - a lot. I learned about the value of education and making the most you could of your talents and abilities from her. 

I only ever once witnessed my paternal grandparents argue,  it was an epic fight. Apparently they fought through the early years of their marriage (leaving emotional scars on my father - that explained his aversion to conflict.) They eventually made peace, agreeing to be kind to one another.  Their love of one another was obvious.  He taught me about hard work, doing what needs to be done, and about the need to take time off.  He loved to hunt, and fish. He treasured his winters in Florida with no work to do.  He had grown up in grinding poverty, first on 80 acres of clay near St Louis, then in Detroit where Ford was paying an amazing $4 a day.  His father was born a trust fund baby, who blew it all and never really knew how to work, or how to manage money. They were my first role model with keeping a budget, saving, and taking care of your money so it can take care of you. My grandmother taught me how to manage a household.  Stocking a pantry, raising a garden, how to be a good manager, and also how to have fun a live well. I learned tolerance, generosity, and forgiveness from her. She taught me about getting outside of my comfort zone. After my grandfather died, she and I traveled to places she always wanted to see, but were outside my grandfather's comfort zone.  He had no desire to return to his roots, my grandmother and I traveled  to explore where he grew up.  She never returned to England, I wonder if she regretted that.  Late in her life, a group from her church planned a cruise to Alaska, she went.  She said, be brave, do it now, you can't take it with you, and if not now when? I learned about bravery and seizing opportunity from her.  One of my few regrets was not spending more time with her in the last 4 or 5 years of her life.  I let work, and the gym, and school get in the way. 

My great grandmother, my father's mother's, mother, was born in Swansea on the south coast of Wales, and came to live with my grandparents when I was a child. I spent hundreds of hours listening to her reminisce about  life, and change.  No matter how complicated things were, she never seemed to let it get her down.  She was in many ways an eternal optimist and a fatalist.  I adored her.  

My grandfathers died the fall I started my last year of high school, weeks apart.  My paternal grandfather had dementia, died of a heart attack in a nursing home.  My maternal grandfather, had a massive stroke parking the travel trailer in Florida. When he was released from the hospital my grandmother didn't want him to go to a nursing home, so they came to stay with us.  A few weeks later he had a heart attack, we took him to the emergency room, where he died surrounded by strangers unsure what if anything they could do to help him (in retrospect, we shouldn't have taken him to the emergency room.) My material grandmother developed Alzheimers and spent several happy years in a nursing home.  She forgot most of her worries about life, and relaxed.  My paternal grandmother gave up her car after backing into parked cars several times, moved to assisted living by her choice.  And died a couple of years later.  My great grandmother, died the fall after my two grandfathers. She had a fall, broke a hip, spent time in a nursing home, and suffered from poor care, very old age, adult failure to thrive.  

They left an impression on me.  Not the article the journal is looking forward, so it is a story I can tell here.      

17 comments:

  1. That is an impact...and nice to hear. My dad's parent both died when i was a baby...so I mostly knew only my mother's parents. He mother.my grandmother I think had the biggest impact on how i came up.

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    1. I am surprised when I think about the span of lifetimes, from 1888 to today

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  2. What exceptional lessons you clearly learned from both sets of grandparents. You were fortunate to have the relationship you had with your paternal grandparents. I never knew great-grandparents and barely knew my paternal grandparents. My grandmother, like your great-grandmother, loved to tell stories. Sadly, if they didn't start in the bible they usually wound their way around to the bible.

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    1. Grandmother Emily told some wonderfully devilish stories. When she was a child in New York, some of the bars had a shuttered opening onto the street, where women could ring the bell and buy beer to go. She and her friends rang the bell and when the barkeeper opened the shutters they tossed horse manure through the window so it went sliding down the bar.

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  3. My father moved my family to AZ when I was 1, intentionally far away from the families on both sides, so I did not grow up really knowing or being influenced by grandparents (or uncles, aunts, or cousins, for that matter.)

    My maternal grandfather died when my Mom was still a teen, so we never met, although we did have a post-death encounter, at least in my dreams.

    My maternal grandmother was deep into her Alzheimer’s by the time I “met” her, so our only interactions were visits to her in a near vegetative state at the nursing home a few times. That was jarring and perhaps a bit scarring.

    I did know and spend time with my maternal grandmother and paternal grandfather, but would not say we were very close and I only had barely tepid relationships with either. I never felt any real sense of warmth, affection, or connection with either. But that was very par for the course with almost all my family dynamics, so it wasn’t unique to them.

    I have occasionally felt pangs of jealousy that others have/had close and nurturing relationships with their grandparents, parents, and siblings. I’ve never had that and feel very much like an “orphan” and “only child” despite having a relationship with my Mom who lives nearby and having occasional text interactions with a sibling here and there. (I have 4 siblings.) I don’t dwell on it much, as I very much accept that it is what it is, but posts like this give me pause to consider what it would be like, or would have been like, to actually have a close relationship with a family member.

    Que Sera Sera…

    Sassybear
    Www.Idleeyesandadormy.Com

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  4. Correction: it was my paternal grandmother that had Alzheimer’s.

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    1. With the exception of her parents, my mother was largely cut off from her extended families. Her mother's feuds with various family members were legendary - siblings that didn't talk to one another for 50 years.

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  5. Anonymous5/08/2021

    You certainly had some interesting and nice relatives. We never appreciated our grandparents at the time but at least I really appreciate them now, long after they have gone.

    This snip from your post stuck a chord with me. Is that my relationship with R? It may be close but not quite. I think we really do love each other, warts, difficulties and all.

    "They were married about 55 years, at times I sensed that they relied on one another, felt committed to one another, but didn't really like one another. They held deep grudges, and seldom practiced forgiveness."

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    1. It was a relationship that worked for them. They were married as teenagers, until she was widowed, she had never lived alone. In different times, they might not have stayed married, but they might have.

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  6. paternal grandfather died in 1960 at age 56; I was 5 and I have no memory of him.

    paternal grandmother cut my father off when he changed religions in 1953; she was known as "the bitch" and died in 1978. she was NOT a nice person the few times I met her.

    maternal grandmother and grandfather helped bring a bit of normal into my abusive home situation with "parents". grandmom died in 1988, grandpop in 1993.

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    1. died at age 56, reminds us of how everyday counts, we are shall we say past that age

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  7. I never knew my paternal grandfather, after whom both I and my father are named; he died before I was born. But my paternal grandmother remarried and so we had Grandpa John who was a riot. My paternal grandmother was what you would call a pistol; barely five-feet-tall, but she was the boss, in a loving sweet kind way.
    My maternal grandfather also "died" before I was born, and so I grew up with my maternal grandmother and her second husband, too. She was a very tough strict woman who didn't like slang, slouching or sass. She was a ruler and not a very kind woman.
    At age eighteen I met my mother's father, who, in fact, had not died. What he had done, however, was return home from work in the late 1940s and find his wife, my stern grandmother, in a compromising position with the man from next door, and he shot and killed the man.
    No prison time, though, because this was Texas and it was legal to murder your wife's lover. Naturally, my grandmother divorced my grandfather and a few years later remarried, as did my grandfather.
    My maternal grandmother died when I was about 20, and her husband died a year later to the day of what his doctor said was a broken heart.

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    1. When I was a teeanger, we had a neighbor who had had the same experience with his first wife's lover, he spent a few years as a guest of the state. A really nice guy, a crime of passion.

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  8. Grandparents can be incredibly important in a child's development, both by being good examples and by being warnings of how not to live. Just like parents too.

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  9. How wonderful to have such vivid and pleasant memories.

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