The Art of the Floating Grandma

My wife and I ran into a scheduling problem.  Part of this problem is of our own doing because we have not cultivated a babysitting group, but at the same time as this is our first child, we aren’t apt to let her spend a lot of time:  1. Out of our sight 2. With just anyone.  Our problem is that H has to work on a certain day earlier than I can be home to do the great juggling act known as the ‘daughter-duty-swap’  (Here’swhatsheate.Here’swhenshepooped.Here’sherbathschedule.Here’swhenthedogspooped…. whooosh!..out the door)…. (oh,anddon’tforgetthelaundry!)

This problem seems to have given us a foothold in the birth of the ‘Floating Grandparent’ phenomenon.  The ‘Floating Grandparent’ premise holds that: 1. They do not hold full time employment OR their work schedule permits them the flexibility to be at your semi-beckoned call.  Part of this reliability may be due to some sort of job loss or suspension due to our current economic pace.  (See:Blessing in disguise)  2. They also must juggle the needs of all your siblings children because YOU are not the only one who wants to take advantage of this über [crap, Josh showed me how to do that umlaut thing] cheap, über flexible childcare force. 3. They honor your expectations for the child.  Bedtimes, teeth-brushing, no ice cream as a meal staple, non-candy eating forays are reasonably honored (this is in direct contrast to the ‘I’m a grandparent and I get to do whatever I damn well please’ hypothesis that gets presented in many the court of family rules/dispute jurisdiction).

I am of the opinion that this relationship needs to be nurtured so a couple of guidelines are probably in order:

1. Don’t overuse the resource.  The more the Floating Grandparent needs to be with your child/children, the less likely it is that you can hide the tantrums, tears and tirades from them, thus leading to a mild hesitancy when asked to assist.

2. Make it at least budget neutral for them.  Are they going to take your money as a wage? No.  Buy a gas card, dinner or send some pictures from time to time.  Maybe crochet them a nice afghan to wrap around their shoulders as they approach their Golden Years (that one hurt, didn’t it Baby Boomers? :-) )

3.  Do things with them.  Odds are, they just don’t want to watch your child/children alone with a warmed up pizza and the latest re-run of Sesame Street.  They probably wouldn’t mind a little time of the full family dynamic as well.

4.  Say Thank You.  Always.  Never take it for granted.

 

After putting all this on paper, I think it is time to start working on my side business ‘Granny Express; A Full Service, On-Call Child care team whose numbers of years of experience is exponentially more than yours or mine”

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One Response to The Art of the Floating Grandma

  1. steve flickinger says:

    We love spending time with all of you. Don’t think you are over using us. Your mother has stated many times that she wants to be available for the grandchildren “whenever”. Maybe her losing her job is for a reason.

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