By Francis X. Rocca on 11.11.02 @ 12:02AM
On the ambiguous role of parents' parents.
Somebody (I think it was Gore Vidal, but I hate to give him the
credit) once said that children and grandparents get along so well
because they share a common enemy.
You don't need to buy that in order to see that relations
between alternate generations are ordinarily smoother than those
between parents and offspring. This shouldn't be a mystery.
Pampering kids is far easier when you're not responsible for their
care and discipline, and kids naturally like to be pampered.
When I was growing up, for instance, my mother and father
forbade all pets except tropical fish. When a friend gave me a pair
of white mice, I was forced to give them right back. The ostensible
reason was that my little brothers would have abused any crawling
or creeping thing by treating it like an animated version of a
stuffed toy. I think it was really that our parents, with three
boys to clean up after, didn't need any more beasts messing up the
house and yard.
Fair enough, I say, now that I have a household of my own.
Except that my son wasn't even two months old when my parents
started telling me to buy him a puppy. This, even though our
apartment is smaller than many American rec rooms. Sooner or later
my mother and father will get their way, even if they have to buy
the puppy themselves and keep it around for our son's visits.
Forget the anecdotal evidence, though. Science has proved that
grandparents are good for a lot more than pets. Recent studies of
families in 18th- and 19th-century
Germany, 20th-century Africa
and contemporary India all show that a child's chances of dying are
significantly lower with a grandmother present.
Why this should be so is not clear. One researcher suggests that
grandmothers could make a life-or-death difference "by encouraging
family cohesion or stifling extreme sibling rivalry." Does that
mean that grandmother-less brothers and sisters are more likely to
kill each other?
In any case, the catch is that kids derive this benefit only
from their maternal grandmothers. Having dad's mom around
is not only no help -- it seems it can even be fatal. Both the
German study and another of a Japanese village over two centuries
showed that children were far more likely to die with a paternal
grandmother around than they were with no grandmother at all.
Darwinian theory offers one possible explanation, based on the
uncertainty of paternity. As one news report puts it: "The maternal
grandmother is the only grandparent who can be sure she is really
related to her grandchildren." Whereas the father's mother is less
likely to feel affection for her possibly spurious grandchildren,
and thus less likely to help nurture them.
As far as it goes, that makes a certain cold-blooded sense, but
doesn't tell us why a woman would actively harm a kid who might,
after all, be her kin. The German researchers propose a solution
that could test the faith of the most committed evolutionist.
Surveillance by a suspicious mother-in-law, they suggest, might be
so stressful for a wife during pregnancy as to weaken her fetus,
lowering its chances of surviving long past birth. (Though as the
Economist points out, there can be little point in
worrying that an already-pregnant wife will cuckold your son.)
That relations with in-laws can be tense is of course not news.
More surprising to me is research showing that children prefer
maternal grandmothers over the paternal kind by a factor of four to
one. Do the kids sense grandma's skepticism of their paternity?
I'm just glad that all these calculations ignore the influence
of grandfathers, which I hope means that such influence is
negligible. In which case, I look forward to reaching that status
myself. After years of bearing the moral burden of fatherhood, it
will be awfully nice to retire.
topics:
Law, Africa