Gransnet forums

Chat

Can it be too late to have a relationship with a grandchild?

(46 Posts)
FlyingSolo Fri 07-Feb-20 16:16:32

On another thread I have noticed some people think that a relationship with a grandchild can be taken up at any time and that grandparents don't need to bond. I would just like to discuss that further. Certainly I agree a few weeks won't make a difference but I wondered if you think there comes a point when it does and that you may never feel as close to a grandchild as you would have done. Someone even mentioned a baby really only needed to bond with Mummy and Daddy during the first year.

Maybe also if you feel shut out for long enough, in order to cope with that, your desire to get to know this child lessens.

To be honest it annoys me when there is always this assumption that grandparents are desperate to get their hands on this child and the parents hold all the power to allow it or not. It is as if it is all seen as the grandparents want something and the parents don't have to give it them. Shouldn't it also be seen as that grandparents are offering your child something too (a loving relationship, an extra person to love them) and perhaps if you push them away for long enough you will end up denying your child what could have been a loving relationship with their grandparent?

I ask this as someone who never had that relationship with a grandparent. I have always felt I have missed out on having extended family in my life.

3nanny6 Fri 07-Feb-20 22:54:36

Another poster said that you can always reconnect with a grand-child even when they are adults maybe you can but so much of their growing up would be missed and things would just not be the same.

MissAdventure Fri 07-Feb-20 23:09:37

I would think it very much depends on the personalities of the grandparent and the child.

Hithere Fri 07-Feb-20 23:16:21

"I feel it becomes too late to really feel like family"

Relationships evolve.
Your relationship with your gc as a baby, toddler, teenager, adult - is not always the same. It will become more distant/less contact the older gc gets, it is normal.

So your relationship with your gc as an adult may be the same as if you met him/her when you are both adults.

It all goes back to expectations - what you think the relationship should look like.

FlyingSolo Fri 07-Feb-20 23:29:55

Hithere, maybe there would naturally have been less contact as they/you grow older but I am simply talking about whether family love exists between the people involved. Family love wouldn't just naturally vanish simply because the grandchild grew up if the relationship had existed growing up. However, creating family love between you once the grandchild is an adult must surely be so much harder, maybe for some not possible at all.

Hithere Fri 07-Feb-20 23:36:05

Of course not! Relationships do not have a window to be created before the bond cannot be created or its quality decreases or becomes non existent

Don't adopted individuals look for their birth families and bond with their half siblings, bio parents?

MissAdventure Fri 07-Feb-20 23:40:55

Not always, and reuniting doesn't always work out for people, either.

There are so many variables.

FlyingSolo Fri 07-Feb-20 23:43:32

You know what, I think what I am looking for really is someone to tell me my feelings are valid. That it isn't my fault that I couldn't form relationships with my extended family as an adult. And that I am allowed to feel as I do about my son's child without it making me a terrible person.

Silly really because I haven't even really told you how I feel.

FlyingSolo Fri 07-Feb-20 23:45:52

Hithere, some do bond with their bio families and some don't manage it

Hithere Sat 08-Feb-20 00:11:48

Fs,
But some do. Glass half full vs half empty

MissAdventure Sat 08-Feb-20 00:23:46

It isn't your fault, flyingsolo.

Its natural to feel closer to family you see regularly for years, I would think. (Unless you don't happen to get on with them)

FlyingSolo Sat 08-Feb-20 01:54:09

MissAdventure, thank you. My mum went back to be close to her family. I tried but could never find a way in. To try felt as forced and artificial as if I had picked any random strangers. There is nothing there.

MissAdventure Sat 08-Feb-20 02:03:49

I know of two other people who have felt the same.

One has a very, very cool relationship with her mother (in fact she doesn't even call her "mum", and one chose never to meet up with her father after a couple of very stilted conversations.

FlyingSolo Sat 08-Feb-20 02:17:29

It is really odd because I do have a relationship with my mum but it is as if her family are just that, her family, not mine. It is as if her family (my family?) are all my inlaws and not really anything to do with me apart from I have a certain medical condition that runs in the family and about half of them have.

MissAdventure Sat 08-Feb-20 02:41:55

Are you indifferent to them, or do you think there is an element of holding yourself back from them? (Maybe because they took your mum away?)
Just a thought.

FlyingSolo Sat 08-Feb-20 03:11:13

They haven't took my mum away. I was way into adulthood before my mum started having loads of contact with them again. When I said she went back to them I meant in an emotional sense, she hasn't moved away. I just feel my mum never gave them to me in the first place. We just grew up not really knowing them because my dad didn't like them and they didn't like him. Perhaps he couldn't find his way in either. It is a massive family. I mean huge. I was just one grandchild among over 20. And, of course, us grandchildren have gained husbands/wives and produced even more great grandchildren. I wouldn't recognise and couldn't name the vast majority of my family. So mostly just completely indifferent to them. The whole thing is just awkward and I can't quite explain it. And I just don't feel I have any right to be there, like a gate crasher within my own family. Like I said there is just nothing there

Sara65 Sat 08-Feb-20 08:08:18

The bond with your grandchildren is one of the most unexpected delights of later life.

I’m not sure if the children are older it could ever be the same, but I’m sure a relationship could still be formed. One set of grandchildren we see less frequently than the others, and I love them the same, but don’t feel as close.

I saw one of my grannies almost every day, it’s nice to have someone in your life, who loves you for what you are, unconditionally.
I think that’s what grandparents do, whatever age the children.

Eglantine21 Sat 08-Feb-20 09:42:39

Oh, *flyingsolo” of course your feelings are valid. What you feel is what you feel.

Maybe what you long for is something different though. That sense of belonging, in your case to a family.

I was brought up in a big family, some of us adopted, some of us birth. Some of us loved the big family and have remained close all our lives, some of us needed more me space and have kept minimal contact as adults. Everybody is different in the closeness they need,

I think you have a picture in your mind of what it could have looked liked for you. But maybe, even if you had been brought up with them, it might not have been like that picture. I know one of my brothers always felt that he was on the outside looking in.

I had four grannies and grandads because of my adoption. My bond with each one of them was different, because we were all different people.

jenpax Sat 08-Feb-20 10:29:34

I sometimes wonder if I am normal in this regard! I love all my GC and enjoy seeing them but it’s not the only thing in my life and I am perfectly happy with doing my own thing most of the time! I love them as babies of course but never had the urge to have them all to myself!

Sara65 Sat 08-Feb-20 11:32:49

Jenpax

I would agree with that, I love them all dearly, and I do see them on their own quite a lot, but I’m always very happy to hear my daughter come in.

I don’t feel the need for one to one time particularly, it’s always nice to have an uninterrupted chat with one of them, but I don’t go looking for opportunities.

BlueBelle Sat 08-Feb-20 12:00:02

flyingsolo maybe I can pop in here My dad came from a medium sized family 4 brothers and sisters I had seven cousins one from one brother and the other six from the eldest child, we all grew up in the same town and yet I never knew any of my cousins Their mother and father had told them we were snobs ....this was so laughable, we lived in a prefab, both mum and dad had non professional jobs, we had very little money as I was growing up but I was an only child so I presume they thought I was a spoilt kid without getting to know me ...so no brothers and sisters and no cousins in my life I was lonely and looking back now realised I missed out on so much
I married, moved away for many years, but after my divorce I returned to my home town and then made a decision to find my cousins, I did, we all got on well I hosted many parties and get togetherS over the next decade including my mum and dad who were delighted They are all dead now but for a good few years we had decent relationships I didn’t love them but I had them in my life and we got on well
I guess what I m trying to say is a relationship is what you want to make of it at any time in your life It’s never too late and you can never change the past so a waste of emotions to dwell on it