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iQuestions Faculty, Dr. Tim & Darcy Kimmel
Question:
My grandchildren's parents are getting divorced. What can I do to help
them?
Answer:
DARCY KIMMEL: Wow, that is something that really can break your
heart, when your children go through a divorce and your grandchildren
are involved in that.
You know what? It’s not the end of the world. It happens. There is
hope beyond that.
But you can do some real hands-on things to help your grandchildren
during this time.
TIM KIMMEL: In fact, we want to suggest four things you can do.
First of all, you need to get personal perspective on this thing. It’s not
uncommon to start beating yourself up, thinking, “Where did we go
wrong? How did we contribute to this? Where did we go wrong with
our own child, that this would happen?” And it’s even tougher when it
might be your child that was the bigger participant in the breakdown
of the marriage.
DARCY: And one thing that happens is you can find a personal outlet
for your pain, so that you can deal with your pain with some
supportive friends, in order to help them deal with their pain.
TIM: And the second thing you want to do is preserve and protect the
relationship with the grandkids.
DARCY: Yeah. That’s right. And one way you can do that is you have
got to keep your feelings about their parents to yourself.
TIM: Yeah. You have got to maintain neutrality, at least when you are
around them. You can talk individually to the parents, but you have
got to maintain a neutrality, because regardless of who is the most
responsible for this marriage breakup, the parents love their mother
and father, regardless of how this came down. You have got to
maintain neutrality, because if you start taking sides, then that can
really wreck your ability to help those grandchildren at the heart level.
DARCY: And as a grandparent, you have the opportunity to be that
steady thread that runs through their lives at this very rocky time, and
you can be around to answer some of those hard questions. You know,
they are going to be asking, “Does this mean I’m going to have to
move? Am I going to have to go to a new school? Am I going to have
to live away from a brother or a sister?”
Those can be hard questions. And as a grandparent, if you are steady,
if you are a rock for them, then they can come to your for those
answers.
TIM: And she’s hitting on the third thing we have got to do, and that is
to help these children heal, because they are hemorrhaging inside.
We all know this is the generation of divorce. We know divorce is very
devastating to kids. It has a way of touching them and putting scar
tissue on them that they have to process the rest of your life.
But you know what? You can turn those things into actually sacred
scars. You can help them get through this thing.
I mean, they need to know that although their immediate world is
falling apart, their bigger world is still very much intact, and you are
part of that bigger world.
See, when we are learning how to get perspective for ourselves, and
we are helping them protect and preserve their own relationship with
them, and then we’re helping them heal, that also protects our access
to these kids, because you may have to talk with some attorneys
about how to maintain legal contact with these kids.
DARCY: That’s right. That might be something you have to put in
place.
TIM: I want to give them the fourth thing, though, and that is, you
have got to keep a contact to those parents, even the one that might
have been causing this divorce the most.
I think that we all know that none of us are perfect people, and both
people can easily participate, but one might have really done
something that devastated them. But keep a heart connection to
them, no matter what. Because you never know when you have to
cross that bridge again. Plus, they are always going to be part of that
grandchild’s life, and they don’t want to see you as someone that they
want to use as a pawn to get even with those grandkids or to get even
with you. This is a tough time for a lot of families.
DARCY: It’s a tough time, but you know what? You don’t have to be
grim.
TIM: No.
DARCY: It’s a hard time, but there is light at the end of the tunnel,
and you are part of that hope, especially for your grandchildren.
To download a printable version of this transcript, click here.
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