news&views Spring 2019 | Page 27

parenting responsibility for the children. Many grandparents raise grandkids part-time or on and off for weeks or months at a time. Some grandparents simply decide not to report what they’re doing to any government agency because they fear the kids might get taken away, or they’re ashamed because their own child dropped the ball, or for some other reason. I’ve heard estimates that as many as a million grandparents in Canada are raising grandkids at least part-time or temporarily. Statistics Canada calls grandparent-headed households ‘skipped-generation families.’ That term simply means the grandparents have taken on parental responsibility because the parents aren’t doing it or were doing it badly enough to require intervention. I wrote Raising Grandkids: Inside Skipped-Generation Families (University of Regina Press, 2018) to honour these households by showing people what life is like for retired or nearly retired men and women to raise children who have experienced abuse, neglect, or pre-natal substance addiction and who suffer the trauma of separation from their own parents. Not only are skipped- generation grandparents misunderstood by social workers, psychologists, and the general public, but many of them also take on undeserved shame for having raised children who are irresponsible as parents, which turns them inward, further isolates them from their neighbours and their peers, and compounds the difficulties they are already dealing with. These include their own ageing bodies; reduced incomes; lack of dental and prescription benefits for children and for themselves, which they would have had if they were still working; a radically reduced social life because they are raising children; and the constant worry about the children’s missing parents. Skipped-generation grandparents also have to help the grandchildren deal with their own issues. These issues include possible pre-natal brain damage from the mother’s use of drugs or alcohol; the profound trauma of separation from their biological parents, which experts say is at least as serious as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in soldiers after combat; feeling socially ostracized because all their classmates have mom and dad at home and they have only grandma and, if they’re lucky, grandpa; and having to meet with caseworkers, who sometimes call them out of classes to do so. For millennia, grandparents in Indigenous communities have helped raise grandchildren. In fact, the extended family and the whole community have all shared the work of child-rearing. In Canada and elsewhere, colonialism, disease, and racism have seriously damaged Indigenous peoples, especially children, but the rest of us have a lot to learn from them about honouring the support of grandparents and the cultural traditions and elder wisdom they share with younger generations. Several years ago, Bob McDonald, the host of CBC Radio’s Quirks and Quarks program, said, “Grandparents are mutant superheroes.” The program featured a scientist doing research on human evolution who noted that homo sapiens is one of only three species of mammals who experience menopause and live long enough after their reproductive years to help raise their children’s children. The scientist claimed that menopause is an adaptive response that humans developed to ensure the survival of the species. I have yet to meet skipped- generation grandparents who think of themselves as heroes, but what word better describes persons who give so much of themselves for others purely out of love? ● news&views SPRING 2019 | 27