My mother is 91 years old and has grown grand children. They do not visit her and she does not get calls from them around the holidays, her birthday or just a call to say "Hi". I find this very disturbing, saddens me very much. Is anybody else going though this experience?
Her grand children are all in the late 20s and early 30s. I do not blame them, however, I blame their parents for not knowing to do the right thing. I have brought this up to one of my siblings and the answer is "I cannot speak for them". At this time my mother has trouble remembering their names or who they are. Also, I get the excuse she won't remember anyway. This is wrong! If they visited or called frequently they will be more familiar to her. Visiting maybe a problem but a phone call takes very little effort and could be easily done.
When I was their age I would go see my grandmother every two weeks and the visits were always short. She would tell me stories from a long time ago. They would not mean anything to me, however, the social interaction was good for her. I would ask questions and she would explain what had happened. Before leaving, I would always say goodbye and I will back soon. She was happy to see me and it made her feel good and I felt better. It is too bad my mother's grand children don't feel the same way.
I tell people all the time the best complement a person can give another person is: To spend time with person. Life is too short.
My parents would send her gifts, emails, cards.. and no answer at all. My mom would be over the moon if she would so much as send her a card or return an email.
I remember how I was when I was that age with my grandparents.. they were everything to me. If I had the technology back then I would have been talking to them every day..but back then we looked forward to our once a week phone calls and visits.
I don't know.. its something I just don't understand..I see it breaking her heart though.. and mine too.
But you better believe when she passes away, they'll all be right there at her bedside, making a good show of being the dutiful grandchildren, and they'll want their share of her possessions to remember her by.
people do get quite busy with their own lives in this rough economy though . i dont have any animosity towards any of them . the less they came around the less they bilked mom out of money .
I find it hard to get my adult daughters involved with my disabled wife so I don't have any easy answers. They dont mind taking her shopping on occasion provided its a store they like and can throw in a few of their own items in the cart. It's sad to witness but I can attest that loyalty and sense of duty is lost even when it involves the parent so grandparent issues don't surprise me.
Glo
Rarely did we talk on the telephone. Back then, long distant calls were only for bad news and very expensive to call. Some used Western Union grams.
Then came career and marriage. Any time we would get off we would visit my parents and visit hubby's parents and all his siblings who all lived in the same State or just over the State line. That didn't leave any time for any long distant trips to visit the grandparents :(
Now I am learning more about the grandparents through all the photos that my late parents had left.
With today's technology, one could use the computer or smartphone to "see" each other... that is if the grandparent is able to use that technology. My sig other has young grandchildren, but he doesn't have the technology to do that kind of communication with them.
The few times she insists on taking a call, afterward she asked me who it was. The caller had no idea what she was talking about either.
I cannot blame the grandkids for not calling.
Visiting my father is not any better. All he can talk about is his bowel movements. My kids will call occasionally but he refuses to wear a hearing aid so talking on the phone is near impossible.
But as for the other grandparents on the mother's side? oh they are the best. They HAVe a relationship with THEM. Why not our side? Why do we have to try so hard?
I don't blame them either generationally speaking, but at the very least, when you make plans to see your grandparents like my neice does, she will blatantly LIE to get out of it, and I will catch her in that lie ("Oh I'm sorry, Nanny, but I think I have the flu") but on social media she paints a different story.
WHY LIE??
It's extremely upsetting. My parents are livid at this point. They only come around for money. They do the same to me too. I was once very close to my niece but not anymore once I figured she just wanted to hang with me because she knew a card filled with money was coming.
But to outright LIE to avoid getting out of something? We've all done it, I'm sure, but to your grandparents? If you don't want to spend time with them, at the very least, don't try to make up a lie, that you'll get caught for.
Sorry, I must've been internalizing. But it's all still very relatable I'm sure.
And now that I am a widow, do they call me or stop by? No. Hmmm. They sometimes include me in their activities (Gramma, we are doing Karaoke tonight. Want to join us?) And I do get invited when they host events. And if I ask for help, they are willing. But their main focus right now is establishing themselves as independent adults and building relationships with their own new families.
I think perhaps it is not realistic to expect more from our grandchildren than their stage in life supports.
And it probably isn't realistic to expect them to start new relationships with grandparents at this age if there wasn't a relationship all along.
I just returned from a visit to 4 of my g-kids who live in the PNW. Mom is a dr., dad (my son) is an attorney. HUGE house. Waaaaay too many toys and things & money--gaming systems on all 3 levels of the house---kids are spoiled rotten.
We have to go visit them b/c they won't come back here (DIL has serious issues with her family). Only the oldest child even attempts to interact with us, but we have been more in her life than the rest of the kids'. Five minutes after we arrived last week, the oldest boy asked if he could have friends over--he was "bored".
By day 5, I was climbing the walls. The kids don't respect any authority, they do what they want, parents scream at them day and night, dog barks incessantly and nobody respects anybody, except mom, who needs her sleep.
I gave each of the kids a little souvenir from Disneyland, b/c they opted out of a family trip there. Just a small keychain with a Disney character on it, but nobody said "thanks" and I later found all 4 keychains, one had been chewed up by the dog, 2 were stuck on a shelf, forgotten and one was outside in the snow.
I love these kids, They know that. We just aren't close and never will be. After last Christmas when I sent a lot of lovely, personalized gifts and received not ONE thank you from ANYBODY..I decided that from now on, I will send them one small gift and that's it. I will send a birthday card with money in it. It is what it is. They pattern their behavior after their parents'. Their PARENTS don't respect us much and the kids take note.
On the other side of the spectrum, my other 10 grandkids are cuddly, snuggly, loving kids. They love to see me show up. They love to come here for sleepovers and parties. I am developing new relationships with the older "tweens" that are just delightful. I like to think we will always be close. But it will take work!
I was dear friends with my grandmothers and spent time with each of them every week, esp after I was married and had kids. I was not close to my mother, so these amazing women taught me how to be a mom and a woman.
The relationship has to go both ways...and it cannot be forced.
I LOVED visiting my dad's mom. She was a gentle, loving, kind, and wonderful person who I adored.
I HATED visiting my mom's dad. He was a bully. Even worse, the thing I REALLY couldn't stand about him, were his racist and homophobic attitudes. It was against everything I believed and everything I stood for. It was against everything my parents instilled in me, and I couldn't believe my mom was willing to put aside what she'd taught me and humour his intolerance. Worse, he was talking about my friends, and when I was in my 20s, my partner at the time was indigenous, so you can imagine how I felt. I stopped even going for Christmas at that point.
Some people from the older generation are just hateful towards people who are different. Some older people aren't necessarily hateful, but they still hold attitudes that are racist, sexist, and/or homophobic, and they don't even realize it, either because it was acceptable to be that way in their day, or they don't really understand what racism, sexism, and homophobia are. It's not acceptable anymore. I find the many of the millennial generation and "generation Z" have no tolerance for this kind of thing, and that should be okay. The world is changing, thank goodness, and they are there for it.
I also think, in the United States, this dissonance has become heightened by what's going on politically. You will find younger people cutting ties because of who and what their parents/grandparents support and/or vote for. They take it very seriously, and I don't blame them. It's their future, not ours.
My mother lives near the grandkids and they do visit, but when she broke her shoulder or needs something done around the house not one of them shows up. Nobody ever misses Christmas when she gives them each a wad of cash. My brother and sister raised these kids, which is why they are the way they are.
There's a reason for everything...