Monday, 25 August 2014

Grandparents (particularly grandmas)...


‘I’ve waited 15 years for this moment’, my mum said excitedly when she gave my, at that point, nine-month-old son, Stefan, and his one-year-old niece, Marie, a pink cardboard box each. What she meant was that my brother and I had kept her waiting for a decade and a half for her to finally become a fully fledged member of the exclusive of all clubs: The Club of Grandparents. Ever since she and my dad had been informed of their future new titles, she had taken every opportunity to refer to herself as ‘mormor’ (maternal grandma) or ‘farmor’ (paternal grandma). My dad on the other hand didn’t seem to have a need to make any amendments to his current titles.

The build up to this pivotal moment had reached its crescendo in the weeks leading up to our visit to my home shores. Every Skype-call had ended with my mum exclaiming how much she looked forward to the moment the two cousins saw each other as this was to be their first meeting. What she had imagined, I’m not sure. How do two nappy wearing, crawling babies normally react to being introduced, independently of whether they share parts of the same DNA pool or not? Was it likely that they would recognize their genetic similarities, grasp each others drool covered hands and shriek wildly (but at an acceptable level)? Well, that’s not exactly how it played out. Basically, Stefan ignored Marie and was a lot more interested in the new toys that were surrounding them and Marie didn’t seem bothered that her presence didn’t cause a stir of emotions in her cousin. I’m still not sure what my mum expected, but I think they both passed her ‘cousins’ first meeting’ test.

When the moment finally arrived and my son took off the lid of the pink box, out fell a small plastic truck and a knitted ball with a bell inside (a bell that didn’t make ‘too much noise’, as my mum explained). I, perhaps a little bit sarcastically, asked if she’d kept those trucks hidden for fifteen years, and she replied with a little laughter that no, she’d just bought them yesterday. The two cousins showed far more interest in the pink bows, which had been intricately tied around the boxes – at some point I even got Stefan to wear his as a butterfly – than the contents. (Even the woollen balls with the quiet bells didn’t catch their attention.)



Back to the Club of Grandparents. My brother and I were 38 and 40 years old respectively, when we granted our parents access to this reverent club. At this point my parents were the only couple among their circle of friends, who didn’t have any grandchildren. It didn’t matter anymore how my brother and I were doing, which jobs we had, if we were or weren’t in a relationship, no, the number one topic of most conversations, as far as I understood, centered around grandchildren. Even though they (or mainly my mum) never specifically said anything about the tardiness with which my brother and I found lasting relationships, it was still there between the lines, when my mum told us about another future grandchild who’d chosen some of their friends as grandparents. I know for sure they’d (she’d) given up on my ever granting them this ultimate gift when I broke up with a longterm boyfriend at an age where most women’s eggs were outnumbered by their age. Luckily Eastern Europe came to save the day in both mine and my brother’s case (my husband is from Romania, my brother’s wife from Ukraine).

Where it’s obvious how much it’s meant to my mum to finally being able to talk about and show pictures of HER grandchildren, my dad seems to be a lot more, what can I saw, DOWN-TO-EARTH about these new additions to the family. I think the only change he’s made to his life is that he’s bought a child seat for his bike and a helmet, so he can take Marie on small bike rides in the area. My mum, on the other hand, started telling all her friends that from the day her grandchildren were born, she would prioritise them over anything else, hence any arrangement she made with a friend, could be cancelled at a moment’s notice, should her grandmother skills be needed. She also informed me that her services would be available within 24 hours – she’d checked out various flight connections and worked out that this timescale would be doable.

It’s lovely to have such devoted grandparents and I know that they (my mum in particular) wish that they lived closer by. Luckily they see my brother’s daughter on a weekly basis and with Skype and email it’s much easier to keep in contact than it’s ever been before.

Yes, Stefan also has a ‘farmor’, my husband’s mum, who’s as excited about him as his ‘mormor’ is. But she is it in a more contained way. It doesn’t bear thinking about two grandmas sharing my mum’s level of excitement…


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