The numbers were rising way before an even bigger spike in this number in 2008, which was widely attributed to economic factors stemming from the deep recession.
When the situation is not due to external factors such as the sudden unemployment of the parents, military parents being deployed to Iraq, or the untimely death or serious illness of the child's parents, the persons in the middle – the mother and father of the child – often fall into one of three categories:
1. Individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD) who neglect, abuse or otherwise endanger their children.
2. Individuals with antisocial traits who end up in jail (antisocial personality disorder is also a "Cluster B" personality disorder just like BPD).
3. Addicts or alcoholics. Many of them may also exhibit significant Cluster B personality traits at one time or another, although in addicts the traits may disappear if and when the addict cleans up.
Courtney Love lost custody of her daughter Frances Bean Cobain to the child's paternal grandmother |
When the cluster B parents starts to open up in psychotherapy about what they think is going on, however, a completely different point of view emerges. They believe that their parents want to take control of the grandchildren, and are just looking for an excuse to do so. They interpret their parents' frequent attacks on them for their bad parenting skills as a coded instruction to become or to continue to be bad parents - so that the grandparents can have the excuse they are looking for to take the kids away.
The child's parents then abdicate their parental role in order to give the grandparents what they seem to want. The parents are, in a sense, offering up their own children as gifts to their parents. The more the grandparents criticize their behavior, the more they think the grandparents are looking for such an excuse, and the worse parents they become. The worse parents they become, the more the grandparents feel obligated to take over the care of children. And it's not just a vicious circle - although it is that - because both the parents and the grandparents are simultaneously giving each other double messages. I refer to this problem as cross motive reading.
A few years ago there was a TV newsmagazine story about grandparents raising grandchildren that illustrated what other family members may be reacting to. Several of the grandmas who were interviewed waxed eloquently about how their grandchild was the center of their universe and how raising their grandchild was such a joy and how it gave their lives new meaning. At other times during the same interview, however, they complained bitterly about how, as elderly women, chasing after their grandkids made them soooo tired. Not that both of these statements cannot be true simultaneously, but I suspect that both the parents of the grandkids and the grandchildren themselves would find the two sentiments somewhat contradictory. If these women expressed them so readily to a TV news reporter, one can confidently wager that their children and grandchildren had heard them ad nauseum as well.
I strongly suspect that one of the main reasons behind the large increases in the number of grandparents raising grandchildren has been the increasing frequency of Cluster B family dynamics in American culture.
I read the biography of Kurt Cobain, Heavier Than Heaven. His mother was a piece of work. It is ironic that she's now considered fit ? to raise the grandchild.
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