Thank you smileless, I don’t look at this thread so often now, though I do pop in sometimes, but I don’t always post. Whilst my situation has improved, but none the less, remains troubled, I know that compared to many I am fortunate. I suffered terrible pain from not being allowed to see my grandchildren last year, and from being excluded from normal information and visits after the birth of my grandchild. Consequently I have enormous sympathy for the many grandparents who are estranged from their grandchildren. I believe that grandchildren have a right to have a relationship with their grandparents. Depending on where each party lives, that relationship should at the very least offer the possibility of FaceTime/Scype times, and letters, and gifts and so on. Where grandparents live near to grandchildren, contact is the child’s right in my opinion.
The estrangement of grandparents appears to be a growing problem in the western world. I wonder why. Is it the ‘all rights and no responsibilities’ syndrome I wonder, or are the current generation of parents much more selfish than we were when we were bringing up children. Certainly I think that younger people are more self absorbed than our generation, but I’m speaking generally, and realise that this doesn’t apply to all younger people. Maybe the emphasis on ‘rights’ in schools has bred a generation of people who think their needs are paramount and of course we have the ongoing arguments about how we, the baby boomers, have selfishly taken everything for ourselves and left them with little, perhaps all these changes in society and in education have made younger people resentful.
Anyway, I’m only musing, and that won’t change the minds of a single AC who has cut out their parents. It’s all so sad.