This is painful. When the grandson you carried on your lap suddenly stops calling. He answers one-word. He sends emojis on birthdays. Grandma becomes unnecessary. Why does this happen? Is the grandson to blame? How to cope? And can the connection be restored? Let's talk openly.
Up to 7 years: grandma is the center of the world. The grandson looks forward to her, misses her, and is happy with gifts. 7-11 years: friends, school, hobbies appear. Grandma is still important, but not in the first place. 11-14 years: teenage rebellion. The grandson may reject adults, including grandma. "You're old, you don't understand my life." This is normal. 14-17 years: separation. The grandson builds his own life, grandma fades into the background. Calls become less frequent. 18+: an adult grandson may be busy with work, study, family. Grandma sometimes falls out of sight.
Important: this is not personal offense, it's stages of development.
Grandma criticizes the grandson's parents (especially the mother). The grandson hears it, gets angry. Grandma pressures: "You must listen to me, I'm the oldest." The grandson resists. Grandma compares the grandson to other children ("But look at Masha..."). Grandma does not respect boundaries (reads messages, enters without knocking, comments on appearance). Grandma complains about her health to attract attention ("I'm going to die soon, and you..."). This is manipulation, the grandson gets tired.
Solution: grandma needs to change her style of communication. Don't criticize, don't pressure, don't complain. Be interested in the grandson's life without judgments.
Grandma interferes in upbringing: "Don't give the child this medicine," "Don't go to this club." The grandson hears arguments between parents and grandma, gets tired. Grandma lives far away, but tries to control through the mother. This creates tension. Grandma spoils the grandson (money, gifts), parents are against it. The grandson may use grandma as a "pocket," not as a close person.
If grandma does not respect the parents, the grandson takes the side of the parents. Grandma loses.
Pain, resentment, a sense of uselessness, depression. "I mean nothing to him." She may get angry at the grandson, the parents. She may manipulate (illness, money). She may withdraw. Important: don't blame yourself. It's not your fault. It's life. Try to switch to other joys: hobbies, communication with friends, traveling. Don't wait for a call — make one yourself, but without reproaches.
Don't pressure. "Why don't you call?" is pressure. Better: "I miss you, I'd be happy to hear from you." Find common interests. Computer games? Grandma can learn to play simple games (for example, online chess). A series you watch simultaneously, discuss in a messenger. Ask for advice. Even if it's not needed. "What do you think, which t-shirt to buy?". Respect his freedom. If he doesn't want to talk, don't call for a week. If he misses you, he'll call.
Gifts without a reason. Not just on birthdays. Send packages with delicious treats, but without demands to "call when you get it." If the grandson is already an adult (25+), let him go. You've done your part. Now he's on his own.
When grandma is no longer needed, this is a natural stage. Don't blame anyone. Love doesn't disappear, it just changes form. There won't be daily calls, but there will be a deep connection. Sometimes one sentence a month is enough for grandma: "I love you, grandma." And that's all that's needed.
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