Posted on 12/23/2024 3:25:16 PM PST by Morgana
People often joke that if they’d known becoming a grandparent was so much fun, they would have done it before having kids. Having grandchildren is widely considered one of life’s great joys, one which, historically, most adults experienced. Today, however, a growing number of people will never have this experience.
Grandparents in America are becoming rarer. In 2014, 60% of people over 50 had at least one grandchild. By 2021, that had fallen to just over half. The historic decline in birth rates means that many who devoted their early lives to raising families will spend their later years watching those families end. The main reason for this is that many millennials, the generation now entering middle age, have chosen not to have kids.
Writing at The New York Times recently, Catherine Pearson gave voice to “the unspoken grief of never becoming a grandparent.” People she interviewed confessed “a deep sense of longing and loss when their children opt out of parenthood, even if they understand at an intellectual level that their children do not ‘owe’ them a family legacy.”
Parents of children who don’t want children find themselves in a difficult spot, especially those who have bought into the expressive individualist idea that children are a choice, and the only reason to have them is to enhance personal happiness. If their children don’t want children, these parents are supposed to be okay with that decision. Apparently, many aren’t.
For example, one would-be grandmother assured Pearson, “This decision was right for my kids,” before adding sadly, “I’m not going to have grandchildren. So that part of my life is just over.” Others who face silent golden years when they expected the patter of little feet are still hoping to convince their adult children to reconsider. One mother said she gently reminds her intentionally childfree daughter that she might not always feel this way—that the woman her daughter will be in ten years “will not recognize the person she is today.”
According to Pearson, she received a largely hostile social media reaction to her article, mostly from millennials. Their “how dare you feel entitled to grandchildren?” reaction puts a “silencing effect” on the whole conversation. In generations past, hopeful grandmas and grandpas would encourage families, but they now simply keep quiet as their children remain unmarried into their thirties, often citing climate change, racism, and school shootings as their reasons to be childless. One 69-year-old mom said her daughter has “made it perfectly clear … that this subject is not to be discussed.”
It’s difficult to imagine a more practical “ideas have consequences” moment than this. The inability of so many to articulate why not having grandkids is a tragedy and to be honest about their grief reveals much about our values. We’ve lost even the language to say what people for most of history took for granted. It is good and normal to want to see your descendants, and it hurts when that hope is dashed.
This moment also illustrates how ideas and their consequences are intergenerational. The view that children are unnecessary burdens or optional accessories did not start with millennials, but it has reached its logical conclusion in that generation. The rapid disappearance and replacement of once-common family relationships, including siblings, cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents has made the world lonelier for young and old alike.
Christians should “mourn with those who mourn,” which is what Pearson’s article attempted. The pain of never becoming a grandparent should be acknowledged and legitimized, and parents should not be bullied into unconditionally affirming every choice their grown children make. Kids aren’t products, so no one is “owed” grandkids, and not everyone will or should get married, but some choices are better for society than others. The record number of people in our world choosing to remain barren points to a deep societal sickness.
Christians should also witness to a countercultural way of life, including a positive perspective on children. At least, we can make sure they know they’re not burdens or accessories, that they bring joy, and that we hope—Lord willing—the same joy may one day find them.
None of this by itself will turn our demographic future around. But until it’s once again okay to look forward to seeing our children’s children, there won’t be much of a demographic future in the first place.
Thank you so very much, FRiend, and may He bless you, too 🙏🏻✝️
Yes, I think you are right with your assessment of the situation after the sixties and the failure of society to teach good values to the young.
Good in the world has to be instilled in children, it does not arrive by itself - just as a gardener always provides for his plants, weeding, fertilizing, watering, knowing well that his garden won‘t provide him with vegetables and fruit if he neglects it.
Or rather, it will bear rotten fruit, metaphorically speaking…the consequences of which we are seeing now 😞
On a more positive note: Have a wonderful and blessed Hanukkah, Sir. May there be the peace of HaShem with you and your loved ones🕎
So tragic to hear that. I am so sorry😞
So utterly sorry to read of your bitter fate😞
If only I could tell you and the others on this thread how much sympathy I feel for you and everyone who has to bear such a cross. I wish you a lot of Heavenly blessings and comfort in your deep sorrow🙏🏻😢
Yes, you are right, and it is so bitter what you had to go through…😞
I would like to send you my compassion, too.
My hope for you is that your elder children, and their spouses, will ultimately decide in favor of having kids, too.
I would wish this blessing upon them - and upon you 😀
How wonderful to read that 😀👍🏻 You really have been blessed!
I have a question: is it okay if I am joyful for you because of your having been blessed so much?🙂
Have a wonderful, blessed Christmas, all of you! 🎄✝️
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