Home Writers Directory Natasha Josefowitz May 24, 2007 |
Doing
It Better
Natasha
Josefowitz
______________________________________________________________________________
Here are ten
conversation-starters
to learn about your adult grandchildren
LA JOLLA, Calif
—Our three adult grandsons visited us recently at separate times at our
retirement community of White Sands. Having visited us yearly since
infancy—at first with their parents and now alone—they have “done” San
Diego. By this I mean that the zoo, SeaWorld, Wild Animal Park, the climbing
wall, Rubin H. Fleet Science Center, the Midway, the Star of India, as well
as the various museums, held little interest.
The weather was cold and rainy, so the usual outdoor activities were out.
And so, reading, movies, the computer, TV and dinners out were the only
acceptable entertainments. All three boys were tethered to their cell
phones, either talking to their friends or text messaging.
To make these trips more meaningful, something else needed to be done. Since
we took all meals together, this was the ideal opportunity to get to know
these young people in their new twenty-something skins, as well as help them
know their elderly grandparents beyond the talk of sports and politics.
So I devised a list of ten questions we all had to answer in turn. A “Yes”
or “No” or “I don’t know” would not do. As each answer was pondered, we
could ask questions to clarify and expand as well as use personal
examples—all of which led to discussion at a deeper level than previously
achieved. This list includes the following which worked well with our
grandsons. This works also well for your dinner parties or whenever you wish
to deepen a relationship.
There is no special order to these, choose the ones you are most comfortable
with; it is important that you talk first as it becomes the model of
how to be personal and revealing.
1. What is (was) your favorite place/book/movie/food?
2. What surprises you most about your life?
3. If you could change one thing in your life so far, what would it be?
4. What decision(s) are you currently wrestling with?
5. Is there one memory you would like to hold onto forever?
6. If you could choose any profession, without further study, what would it be?
7. In whose shoes would you like to walk for a day?
8. What topic gets you the most excited or most upset?
9. What is the one thing you are most proud of?
and finally…
10.What are you most grateful for?
Obviously not all the topics can be covered during a visit, one must choose
the few most appropriate for the particular grandchild’s circumstances. Some
are easy to answer for the non-talkative kid, some are more complex.
Most answers were quite illuminating and some helped us uncover whole sides
of personality we knew nothing about. Since we as grandparents also answered
these questions, the kids heard about parts of our lives they had never
known, as well as our own hopes, fears and dreams.
A different question and one that can only be asked after trust has been
built and confidentiality respected is “What is the one thing you have said
or done and should not have, or not said or done and should have—and still
feel badly about?” Be sure to share your own feelings of guilt first. This
may turn out to be quite cathartic.
Allow the conversation to go off topic and to any direction that seems
meaningful. The questions you choose to ask are also the ones you are
willing to answer and in the process, your new, increased and deepened
knowledge of each other will result in a new, increased and deepened
intimacy and that, after all, is the most wonderful thing we an ever offer
our grandchildren.
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