Recipes for my grandchildren
Let's get something cleared up right away - I am not a cook. Other than the Barbecue and I could always cook them up some hamburgers or fish or veggies there, but that would be the end of this post. As much as you might wish that, I am going to instead forge ahead on a quite different path.
I have four grandkids that I will list later, but it is important to lay the groundwork for the tale I have to tell. I had two grandfathers, the most relevant people for my background as a grandfather. One of them was a bar room brawler with alcohol problems in his early grandfatherly years, but all of that was hidden from the view of me as a child. He was after all a good provider and was warm enough with us kids, so there was never a problem there.
My other grandfather was, as we were told when we were young since there was just too much to hide, a bit eccentric. In reality, as my mother so aptly phrased it, he was nutty as a fruitcake. That is unkind, for in that early age, there were not the medicines available today and not a grandmother who insisted he take nothing stronger than an aspirin. But, it is hard to hide that something is a bit different to a child when you go to his house and hear a whamming sound happening over and over in the back yard only to discover that he has put two poles in the ground, has inner tubes stretched between them, and is launching softballs against the back of the garage like using a slingshot.
The point really is that neither grandfather was any harm, any foul growing up. I bare no resentments or scars from either. But, I was also not left with a good gauge of what involvement could be like with my grandchildren. My father moved that needle with his grandchildren as I expected a lifelong elementary principal to do, but I was already grown at that point.
So, I'm kind of making some of my recipe to serve my grandchildren on my own. That is the most appropriate in any case, because it makes it less limited and more exciting. So, first I have to gather my recipe ingredients:
- Love. Need a big supply, because it goes into everything you cook.
- Involvement. Got to be there every good chance you get.
- Excitement, Joy and Awe. Kids really eat this up, because it is usually wrapped up in Play!
- Mystery. It is kind of like a spice. Once they figure you out completely, you might as well serve dry toast.
- Adventure. This is the spice. Ain't no good without the spice!
- Education. There is still something the old man has to teach and in the process, they think of other old people with a bit more affection.
- Understanding. Sometimes their life is hard. They need grandparents in their corner.
Fantastic approach to a rather unusual topic. Both of us coincidentally enough have used grand parents as an approach to our posts.
ReplyDeleteIndeed. It is a point of reference.
DeleteI loved this post more than I can express! Beautiful take on the topic. Another point worth mentioning - you have a beautiful family!
ReplyDeleteThank you! And I thought you would enjoy Wally doing yoga.
DeleteI never had much interaction with my grandfathers but was essentially raisedby my maternal grandmother in her deep south, Mississippi/Louisiana way. Hence my affinity for fried chicken LOL.
ReplyDeleteShe served you more than fried chicken. She served you that Southern sensibility!
DeleteAnd yet my interactions with my grandpas taught me wonderful things. I learned tolerance, compassion, and acceptance, valuable tools that the world could use more of right now.
ReplyDeleteReflection is bringing back more memories from times with the two of them. I learned more than I came up with first pass! Thanks for the reminder, Sit!
DeleteParent emeritus is just right. Loved your recipe...the teacher can be seen surely. Loved the family 💞 but the yoga masters got my chuckle!
ReplyDeleteBless you
Wally timed his down dog perfectly for that picture!
DeleteYou're a nice grandfather. I like the take you have on the parents of the grands. You know they're doing the grafting, but kids need grandparents on another level. And yes. Life is hard. It's good to have grandparents in your corner.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Maria. At most, I try to be the catcher in the rye with them, keeping them from falling off a cliff while playing.
Delete