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Solace for “Never to Be” Grannies

By Renee Langmuir November 07, 2023 Family

Grandparents have had an outsized role in my life. No, I was not blessed with four doting “Grans.” I only had three: one disinterested grandparent who lived at the shore, and two who primarily spoke Yiddish and whose hearts were scarred by the Holocaust.

The grandparents I valued most were the four who stepped in to help raise and love my daughter, and later their non-biological grandson, after my first husband’s tragic death at the age of 30. I never imagined that I would not be a grandmother, because those people were so vital in my life. 

A Group I Didn’t Want to Join

It now appears that such a foregone conclusion will probably not come to pass. Because US Census data finds 86% of women in their childbearing years eventually have children, I find myself in a small, non-elite group of what a relative has termed, “infertile grandmothers.”

It is easy to feel the remorse of not having a new baby to hold or witness one’s family expand. There is not a natural outlet for sharing family stories, providing a legacy, or having a reference point as life marches forward.

There is a palpable sadness about loss of the opportunity to forge deep, emotional bonds with members of one’s own tribe. And it is in the word “tribe” that a wider understanding of grandparenthood emerges.

Are Humans Wired Up to Want Grandchildren?

Grandparenthood and the act of procreation are very closely aligned. Evolutionary biology finds that the interest in procreation is rooted in the human psyche. As the pandemic has vividly revealed, we are a social species. We like to gather and commune in familiar groups.

We value “belonging” in a huge way. However, there are differing opinions, both scientific and those based on social science about an innate need to procreate as parents, and later as grandparents.

What Are the Contrasting Theories?

The theory of pronatalism, which is a political idea dating back to the time of Louis XIV, promotes the value of human reproduction as an anchor to society. Religious groups such as Catholics, Haredi Jews, Mormons, the Amish, and Salafi Muslims are relevant examples. The main responsibility of their women is to procreate.

By contrast, scientific theories refute this idea, and claim that the sex drive in humans is more of a “pairing” ritual, because human infants benefit from more than one caretaker. Laura Carroll in her post on Invivomagazine.com refutes pronatalism. She describes three faulty assumptions: that it is “normal” to want to have kids, it is our “destiny,” and that having offspring is a key method for “fulfillment” in life.  

After examining the literature, I feel somewhat like a victim of society’s powerful messaging, not to mention a personal, embarrassing wish: to have a grandchild with curly blond hair and blue eyes just like my children and me.

I Did Not Create the World’s Problems

Ultimately, the decision about whether I will become a grandmother is 100% out of my control. It is up to my children. Of course, romance and financial circumstances play a role, but in the modern world, there is a multitude of compelling factors that enter into the decision to have or not have a child. Psychologists advise wannabe grandparents to avoid the subject altogether to prevent estrangement from adult children.

The Brookings Institution expects 300,000-500,000 fewer births as a result of the pandemic. Effects of the Great Recession on our economy, the high cost of having a child, and exorbitant daycare costs buffered by stagnant wages are well publicized reasons for this trend.

Climate change, the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, and the previously unimaginable closure of schools for extended periods of time are other strong reasons for the personal choice of going childfree.

Statista reports that in the US, 60.4% of women ages 25-29 and 38.5% of women ages 30-34 are childless. Those numbers are staggering to a woman who had her first child at age 27, like so many of her peers! Medical experts suggest the prime ages for childbearing are the late 20s to early 30s. Obviously, our society is not attuned to that important biological fact.

These arguments are not offered as “sour grapes.” These are the real reasons many couples choose not to have children. There is also the issue of fertility as couples need to build significant resources before establishing a family, delaying attempts to become pregnant.

Creating a Life of Meaning

With the evidence that bringing a child into the world at this time can be a burden and a great risk, the more self-centered reasons of romanticizing babies, and seeing grandchildren as an extension of oneself seem quite trivial. The question of how a fertile or infertile grandma can find meaning in her own life will always be a key dimension of retirement in all circumstances.

The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement has many suggestions which it offers to young adults to encourage a childfree life. This organization aims to enlist followers to remain childfree to “return the earth’s biosphere to its former glory.” Their list of suggestions very closely parallels substitute activities for grandparent wish fulfillment.

If you want to make a lasting contribution to society, think of a good way to give back to the world. If you want to carry on your family name, make a donation to a charity in your own name. If you love babies, volunteer in an NIC unit or become a foster grandparent. If you have the need to nurture, use your skills with the elderly, the ill, the handicapped, plants or animals.

All philosophical discussions circle around the main objective of the later stages of life: finding meaning. Those who are bona fide grandparents cannot be seduced by an easy slide into this role, as the role of a grandparent is anything but “easy.”

While there are many advantages for three generations, there are limitations. Wishes of parents must be honored, unlimited freedom and control of the kids do not exist, and grandchildren can become an unhealthy obsession, becoming a placeholder for more individual pursuits.

Personally, my new-found acceptance of being grandchild-less fits more into my universal way of looking at the world. I accept that I am a very, very small part of the cosmos. I am but one of billions of organisms on this earth, each of which has a particular lifespan and connection to others.

I look at this stage of life as having the time and wisdom to begin seeing myself as a new individual, no longer bound by former roles and responsibilities. There is so much work which needs to be done in this world. I relish finding those situations which suit my values and physical capabilities. Most importantly, I truly accept that my two children are the sole deciders if there will be new branches on the family tree, a harmonious way of being.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

If you are a “never to be” grandma, have you learned to accept this situation? What life experiences have contributed to where you stand in this matter? If you are a grandma, is the reality as rosy as it appears to those of us without grandchildren? Are we truly missing out on a key life experience?

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Pauline Probert

The choice I made as a young woman to marry a man who didn’t want children (thought he would change his mind, but he didn’t) means I once again don’t fit in with the crowd, always feeling like a misfit, this time it’s grandchildren conversations, I think it will be different for young people today as many more couples are deciding to be childless so their will be more of their childless peers.

Catherine

I married late in life and didn’t fulfill my lifelong hope of having children. That leaves me feeling, as you do, like a misfit. I’m thankful that I have nieces who now are having children. I always enjoy seeing them, but I am on the periphery of their lives most of the year. I know that it’s up to me to find meaning in this stage of my life, but I think there always will be a feeling of sadness for these experiences that I missed.

Lin

I am very fortunate, at age 76, to have five grandchildren, ranging in age from 2-15. I would have been very sad not to have seen our family expand. Every generation has reasons why more children should not be born but somehow we keep moving along. I have a 78 year old friend who tells me that her biggest regret is in never having children. I don’t share my pictures or stories of my children or grandchildren with her unless she asks. But my six year old granddaughter will be in Nutcracker next month and I am so excited. I still have my own fulfilling life and unlike the other person who wrote, I feel it may be some selfishness on the part of the 30 somethings who have decided to have fun without the expense of children, rather than selfishness on the part of those who do decide on the wonderful adventure of parenthood.

LadyVan

My sons don’t plan to marry or have children. All the reasons you cited are the ones they espouse. They both work 6 days/week, and make great money, but realize that would make for a terrible marriage and parenting. The glory days of the nuclear family and lots of extended family nearby has all but gone by the wayside. My husband and I didn’t have it, either, with both our sets of parents divorced, some remarried—sometimes multiple times—dysfunctional, working, “blended” families, and no extended family anywhere near. Trying to work, commute in opposite directions and raise kids was grueling. Constantly juggling two or more sets of holidays for all the divorced parents/spouses was exhausting and demoralizing. I understand why the younger adults no longer favor “traditional” options.

Joanne

I am the Nana of five young grandchildren who I deeply love and take great delight in. However (and I never thought I’d say this), I wonder now whether hoping for grandchildren was such a positive thing. I now actually suffer from an ongoing existential angst and worry: what will their world/lives be like in 20/30/40 years?
A secondary source of sadness is the gulf that their births has created between my sister and I. She has longed for grandchildren, but infertility and other issues have prevented this so far. I would love for her to be a ‘second grandmother’ to my grandchildren! She would be awesome! (and greatly loved by them). I do understand that her sadness has caused her distance, but oh how they are all missing out on potentially wonderful relationships!
I’ve always believed that the more people that love a child the better: no ‘ownership’ involved. So all of you who do long for grandchildren – go out and find a child to love – blood or no blood – that will be your amazing legacy (and our hope for all our children’s futures)!!!

Toni

I love the “obsessed” grandparent statement I too at 65 do not have grandchildren and I’m ok. I really didn’t want to have children but gave in to my husband. I have 2 wonderful boys. I lost my wonderful husband when I moved out of Chicago to a small town because of my boys. My husband refused to leave his family to take our boys to a more simpler life. If I never become a grandparent…I am ok. My life is full of wonderful friends and my boys. I am content!

The Author

Renee Langmuir was an educator for 34 years in public schools and at the university level. After an unplanned retirement, Renee chronicled her transition in a series of personal essays on the website, https://www.therookieretiree.com/. Her writing has appeared on the websites Agebuzz, Next Avenue, Forbes and in The AARP Ethel Newsletter.

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