When a child is born, several important relationships are created—including the relationship between grandparent and child. Like all relationships, the actual nature of the grandparent/grandchild relationship is ever-changing.
For the more than four million children living in grandparent-headed households that relationship is more like a parent/child relationship. For many families, whether by family circumstances or family living choices—grandparents and grandchildren live in the same home and have daily opportunities to interact. Other families experience many miles (even continents) of separation allowing only infrequent visits between grandparents and grandchildren. But even physical distance can be overcome by frequent communication—by letter, telephone, or e-mail.We know from research the critical impact one caring adult can have on the survival of a child considered vulnerable or at-risk. We know—and can learn much more—about the power and potential of the grandparent's relationship for any child by listening to and observing the many loving interactions between children and grandparents around us.
What Children Say About Grandparents
- A grandmother always thinks you are going to get hurt.
- A grandfather is a very old man; long, long ago he was something like me.
- A grandmother is seriously concerned over germs, but will come to your soccer game and cheer when she doesn't know what is going on.
- Grandparents have time to listen; invite you over to sleep; and tell stories about your family.
- A grandpa comes to school to read and be a friend to my friends.
Over the ages, grandparents seem to be frequently described in terms of what they do for or bring to a young child or the family: mends clothes, makes wonderful stew or cookies not-from-a-box, gets mud out of sneakers, keeps candy in a pocket, walks just to go walking, takes everyone to church to sing, digs worms in the garden, always stops cleaning house to play, goes to the store with you even if she doesn't need anything, makes a party even when it's no one's birthday, sits with you while you do homework as the "eraser lady", reads stories with his eyes closed, goes fishing just to watch you, takes you to the doctor even when you cry, lets you play in puddles, plays games he can't win, holds your hand at just the right times, and reminds parents that they were once little children.
Grandparents of the twenty-first century will very likely do many of these same things. And, they also may be engaging in new activities with their grandchildren: making microwave meals, going to children's museums, exchanging e-mails, writing and illustrating stories on a computer, even building family websites.
Whatever the activity, the characteristics that grandparents bring to these loving relationships include:
- Caring and "being there" over time
- Consistency in message and manner
- Looking for and finding the good in each child
- Making and taking time
- Nonjudgmental listening
- Keeping the stories alive
- Seeing life through the eyes of a child
- Loving as only a grandparent can love a grandchild
National Association for the Education of Young Children
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