Well, we have a new granddaughter. Actually, she was “new” some nine months ago,
but is just now making her appearance into the world. She joins our other three grandkids in a
family that relishes relationships, knows it takes a village, and cares
passionately about each other. I don’t
know the other side of the family all that well, but suspect many of these same
qualities could be attributed to them as well…so there’s no escaping for her. She’ll be loved regardless!
It’s kind of a strange vocation, this job of being a
grandpa. Grandpas are not expected to be
parents. They’re supportive,
non-judgmental, and even-keeled. Yet,
when called for, grandpas are to provide correction and training, perhaps of
the kind that parents struggle with or for whatever reason cannot get through
to the grandkid.
Grandpas love unconditionally. Grandpas bring gifts and treats. They have things in their pockets such as
quarters for the trinket machines at the restaurant. Grandpas do things, and allow the grandkids
to do things that they normally wouldn’t be able to do (like not having to clean
up one’s plate before ice cream treats, or allowing more jelly on a piece of
toast than a parent would allow). They
act as a rudder when needed, and an oar when necessary.
Grandpas ferry grandkids to school, the doctor, or elsewhere
when called on to do so. They make
pancakes and homemade syrup. They tell
about the olden days. And they talk
about people previously unknown, great aunts, cousins, and great grandfathers
and mothers, who are in that child’s heritage.
Grandpas help their grandkids learn to ride a bicycle. They give them a ride on the riding lawn
mower, even when Mom doesn’t like it very much.
They mail letters to their grandkids addressed to “Master” or “Miss”. They tickle (appropriately) and “get” ears,
noses, and other assorted (appropriate) body parts. They sing parts of old songs that they know
only parts of, when it seems appropriate to do so (or even when it doesn’t seem
so). They say funny things, tell funny
poems, and rhyme funny rhymes.
They read books 30, 40, or even 50 times and watch Dora the
Explorer, Thomas the Tank Engine, My Little Pony, and Bob the Builder enough
times to know all of the plot lines (such as they are). They play the Winnie the Pooh song &
video on their Androids and take the grandkids to church, reinforcing parental
teaching to be quiet and reverent.
Grandpas wash off the front porch and siding when the
spiders make webs and the dirt blows in.
They bring over the Roundup and kill out the Bermuda grass that grows in
the driveway cracks and flower beds. They
trim the tree in the back yard and clean out the cooling coils of the air
conditioner unit. And they wonder how
they could get a sandbox in the back yard without Mom having a cow.
Grandpas support grandmas and enable them to ooo and aah,
spoil the grandkids, buy them Easter outfits, Christmas presents, and birthday
cakes, and generally have a great time being a grandma.
But most of all, grandpas support Mom and Dad…helping them
to understand what love truly is, validating their authority and their
decisions, and providing counsel when asked (and knowing when to provide it
even when not asked). Grandpas pray for
the family, the kids, the school teachers, the other grandparents, and the kids’
friends. And they’re just a little
wistful that they probably will not be around to see the full maturity of these
gifts from God, but nevertheless wouldn’t have it any other way.