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When I moved away from home and had a family of my own, I would call my mother at least once a week, just to see how she was.
My then husband did exactly the same for his mother.
Itâs true we had to listen to her telling us how sheâd just been to see The Sound Of Music for the 35th time or that her sciatica was playing up, but thatâs how it was in those days.
Distant: Liz Hodgkinson with her grandchildren (from left) Arthur, Henry and Delilah
It was our duty to maintain regular contact, the natural thing to do. But it seems that the days when adult children gave their elderly parents some time and consideration are long over.Â
A new survey conducted by Age UK has found that only a fifth of over-65s see their adult children as much as once a fortnight.
This lack of filial regard is cited as one of the major factors in the growing problem of elderly loneliness.
According to the research, grandparents these days are lucky to see their grandchildren once a month.
Once a month? Iâm lucky if I see mine once a year!
My son Tom and his partner Victoria live in Devon. They have three children, Arthur, 12, Delilah, ten, and Henry, eight.
My son Will and his wife, Nicola Jane, live in Peckham, London, and have two children, Otto, 12, and Pearl, ten. Â
Iâm proud of my sons and my daughters-in-law.
Theyâve done very well for themselves.
Tom, 44, is a writer and journalist and founded an events venue in Notting Hill with Victoria
Tom, 44, is a writer and journalist and founded an events venue in Londonâs trendy Notting Hill with Victoria.
My younger son, Will, 42, is a rock journalist and writer and Nicola Jane is a fashion writer, lecturer and curator.Â
They are all very glamorous and lead suitably busy lives. But, quite simply, I donât play a role in their lives at all. I donât seem to be a vital cog in the wheels of their family life â" and, because of this, my relationship with my grandchildren has suffered.Â
Itâs not just that Iâm at the bottom of my childrenâs priority list, Iâm not even on it. True, I live in Oxford, so am not as close geographically as I might be.Â
But never once does it occur to my sons, daughters-in-law or grandchildren to call â" just for a chat. Some years, they donât even call me at Christmas.Â
Itâs very different from my own childhood, wh en I saw my grandparents every day and had a warm, close relationship with them.
I would like it if my grandchildren could just pop in sometimes without there having to be a great song and dance about it â" come for tea or Sunday lunch, for instance.Â
But now they are growing up, they have their own endless activities and, it seems, are just too busy to see their gran. Iâm even thinking of hiring 12-year-old Arthur, a digital whizz, as my IT support man, just so I get to see a bit more of him.Â
Because I see my grandchildren so rarely, when I do manage to see them it means they seem to almost be strangers who have grown a couple of inches and are wearing trendier clothes than the last time we met.Â
With such minimal contact, I canât keep up with what they are doing, what hobbies they have or what they like to read, if anything.Â
No wonder they regard me as this strange, re mote old lady who is so eccentric that she has to have everything in her house matching, right down to the towels and toiletries.
My grandchildren regard me with a kind of amused tolerance but they do seem to quite like me, as far as I can tell.Â
They chatter all the time once they relax, but because I never get to know them very well, they are shy with me at first.
As they grow up, Iâd like to get to know them better and perhaps even offer some grandmotherly advice.Â
We all get on well, but I donât play any part in their lives, and thereâs a sadness in that.
To them, Iâm just an old bat they have to humour once or twice a year.Â
The distance between us all stems from my relationship with their parents, of course, which is sporadic, despite my best efforts to make it otherwise.Â
Rarely do my sons answer m y emails. Even more rarely do they answer emails from their father.
In fact, he often says ruefully that if he didnât take the initiative and make contact from time to time, he would probably never hear from them again.
Loved: Liz Hodgkinson with her grandsons Arther (left) and Otto (right)
My sons arenât likely to cut me off completely because, at the moment at least, Iâm still too useful to them.
I know that if ever I do get a call out of the blue, it will be to ask me to help out with some problem they have. In fact, whenever the phone rings and itâs one of them on the line, it will be: âMum, can you?.?.?.?â
It seems they only ever remember my existence when they want something.
Otherwise, I sometimes feel I could die and it would be days, perhaps weeks, before it occurred to them that Iâd gone even quieter than usual. Theyâre not being deliberately unkind; it just never occurs to them to wonder how I am.Â
Iâm not saying that we have a bad relationship; far from it. All of us get on extremely well, with endless interesting chat, when we do meet. But for some reason â" perhaps itâs the intense pressures of modern life crowding in â" there is never any space in their heads to give a second thought to their old mum. Itâs hardly a surprise that my grandchildren never seem to think of me either.
When I think how their father and I did everything we could to make life pleasant for our sons, slaving away to send them to the best schools and trying to give them a secure home life, it does sometimes hurt that they have cast us off so discourteously, as the old song has it.Â
Since our children have been adults, we have helped them out financially from time to time and acted as the Bank of Mum and Dad. I gave Will a five-figure sum to help buy a house, and their father and myself have helped out with a few thousand here and there to help each of them over a tight patch.
And â" call me a soft touch â" if my grandchildren needed help for university fees, I wouldnât hesitate to put my hand in my pocket, despite the fact contact with them is sporadi c.Â
In contrast, I dread to think of the shocked reaction I would get if I asked Tom or Will to send me any money because I couldnât pay the electricity bill.Â
It seems as if children these days never grow up, however old they may be, whereas in the past they would take responsibility for their aged parents.Â
But never mind money. My deepest sadness is reserved for the fact that Iâm not being allowed to truly get to know my five grandchildren. Â
So little do I seem to matter that I still havenât had a letter, phone call or email from any of the grandchildren to say thank you for their Christmas presents.
As a child, I was made to sit down and write thank-you letters and I made my own children do the same.Â
Even this simple little courtesy seems to have disappeared. It might be nice if my sons said to their own children once in a while: âWhy d onât you give Granny a ring? She might be on her own.âÂ
Other grandparents have similar tales of woe.
A friend whoâs over 65 had to go into hospital over Christmas for a serious operation and has still not recovered. He told me his only daughter (admittedly living in a different country) has not once called to ask how he is, or put the grandchildren on Skype to say hello.
One of the reasons for this modern cavalier attitude towards elderly parents is distance.
We live ever further apart from each other. But thatâs not the only reason for us slipping out of sight and mind.
The other week I visited my housebound 89-year-old aunt who said that her daughter-in-law never, ever visits â" and sheâs only 20 minutes away. Why?
Well, I think we seem too boring to our children to bother with. Their lives are rich and full but we are old hat, tedious reminders of bygone days. How is it weâre annoyingly still around?Â
In some ways, I think Iâm partly to blame. If Iâm lonely because my children and grandchildren rarely visit or make contact, itâs also because I donât whinge and whine or put emotional pressure on them to pay me more attention.Â
At the moment, I am very independent and have my own busy life to lead. What will happen when Iâm old and frail remains to be seen. Â
Even so, I will not be permitting myself the sweet revenge of one old lady who recently died, leaving a £1million estate.
In her will she left just £2,000 to her son âin recognition of all the attention he has paid me over the last 25 yearsâ. The bulk of her estate has gone to charity.Â
My sons complain that they will be old themselves before I die, but they will still be my beneficiaries.Â
After all, I do love them and all the grandchildren, even if the relationship is depressingly one-way â" and looks as if it will remain so for the rest of my days.
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