The Oldie magazine January 2022 issue No 408

Page 40

Postcards from the Edge

The joy of being a granny

Forget the difficulties of motherhood, says Mary Kenny – just rejoice in the prospects of grandmotherhood

TOBY MORISON

‘Never have children – always have grandchildren,’ was one of Gore Vidal’s cynical, gnomic utterances. Being a flamboyant, gay guy, Gore wasn’t faced with the choice. Yet the advice might be useful to the numbers of fretful women I hear agonising over whether to become mothers or not. Motherhood is rather unpopular these days – the British fertility rate is at its lowest since 1938. The thirtyish and fortyish generation debate with themselves over whether the worry, trouble, expense and sacrifices involved in parenthood are worth it. And modern babies seem to demand such high-intensity focus! It’s that word ‘choice’ that has so many ambitious women in their prime agonising about whether or not to propagate. Throughout most of human history, there wasn’t that much choice about it. I recall that jolly author Margaret Powell telling me, ‘Back in my day, if you got married, you were expected to have children.’ Or, as Princess Anne once put it, with her characteristic dry wit, ‘Motherhood is a professional hazard of being a wife.’ But now, behold the bewildering range of possibilities: marriage, civil unions, babies, no babies, IVF, baby by surrogacy, babies by donor sperm, single parenting by choice, childlessness by choice or even the traditional route of wedlock and then a sprog or two. What to do? Here’s my Gore Vidal-ish advice. Don’t ask yourself if you want to be a mother. Ask yourself if you want to be a grandmother. Grandchildren aren’t a guaranteed product of parenthood, but looking ahead does help you to take the long view. To the 38-year-old career girl I heard saying, ‘I just can’t decide whether I want to be a mum,’ I just say, ‘Try to decide whether you want to be a grandma.’ Patricia Casey, a professor of psychiatry at University College Dublin, thinks Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are misleading young people with their emphasis on 40 The Oldie January 2022

‘mental-health issues’. Not getting along with – or feeling undermined by – your in-laws, or even suffering the loss of a parent in tragic circumstances, is not a mental-health issue, says Patricia Casey. ‘Mental-health issues are schizophrenia, bipolar illness, severe depression. Distress in reaction to sad events is normal.’ Harry has had therapy, but Professor Casey doesn’t think he’s much of an advertisement for it – or he’d recognise the difference between mental-health afflictions and normal distress. It’s evident that the Sussexes are a ‘highfunctioning couple’; people who have mental illness can’t function at all. Describing reactions to difficult or sad life events as a ‘mental-health issue’ is detracting from serious mental illness, she says. ‘The focus has shifted too far away from real mental illness like schizophrenia or clinical depression, and too much towards ordinary negative feelings, which are normal.’ COVID and, indeed, climate change may make some people anxious and indeed fed up, but they are not a trigger for mental illness. Professor Casey’s Fears, Phobias and Fantasies explains the difference between the worries, vexations and sadness of everyday life and genuine mental illness. When Brexit occurred, Paris, Amsterdam and Frankfurt hoped to replace the

City of London as Europe’s major international financial centre. But London bounced back and the City is said to be thriving – Shell’s decision to move to London, leaving the Netherlands, was considered significant. I daresay these decisions are related to London’s historic links with wider international finance. But perhaps an added factor is that London has a social ‘buzz’, absent in Amsterdam and Frankfurt. A city’s ‘buzz’ is hard to define but it’s palpable, and London has it. Much as I appreciate my residency in Deal, by the Channel coast, I always find those words ‘This train is now departing for Charing Cross’ exciting. When Simon Jenkins, author of the lavish Europe’s 100 Best Cathedrals, is asked to name his own favourite, he nominates Seville as the finest in Europe. Wells Cathedral wins the laurels in this country. Seville Cathedral, which is also a palace, is certainly stunning. Yet the European cathedral that I have found most affecting is Beauvais (by Ryanair’s ‘Paris’ airport). It’s small for a cathedral and propped up with buttresses; it was here that so many men came to pray when serving in the First World War – and many came, afterwards, to mourn. It now has a special dedication to peace, and that affecting memory of the Great War lingers. For basilicas, I’d pick the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, partly because every leftie, including George Orwell, wanted it destroyed during the Spanish Civil War, just as most of Catalonia’s other churches were. But even anticlerical Catalans knew that Antonio Gaudí was a great architect: his basilica survived and is now a World Heritage Site – as well as a place of worship. Let the cathedral bells ring out for Christmas!


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

10min
pages 98-104

Taking a Walk: Maiden Castle, Dorset Patrick

3min
page 86

Overlooked Britain: Cardiff

6min
pages 84-85

On the Road: Dominic West

3min
pages 87-88

Beatrix Potter’s Lake District

6min
pages 82-83

First Old Bailey woman judge

3min
page 81

Bird of the Month: Greylag

2min
page 80

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 75

Television Frances Wilson

5min
page 68

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 71-72

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 69

Film: Operation Mincemeat

3min
page 66

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 70

Media Matters

4min
page 63

History David Horspool

4min
page 62

The Rector’s Daughter, by F M Mayor A N Wilson

3min
page 61

The Vanishing: The Twilight of Christianity in the Middle East, by Janine di Giovanni

4min
pages 55-56

On Getting Better, by Adam

4min
pages 59-60

Lady of Spain: A Life of Jane Dormer, Duchess of Feria, by Simon Courtauld David

2min
pages 57-58

These Precious Days, by Ann

3min
pages 53-54

Putting the Rabbit in the Hat by Brian Cox Michael

4min
pages 51-52

Æthelred the Unready, by Richard Abels Hugo Gye

3min
pages 49-50

Readers’ Letters

7min
pages 44-45

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 40

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 43

Town Mouse

4min
page 34

Britain’s oddest bets

6min
pages 36-39

Country Mouse

4min
page 35

Small World Jem Clarke

4min
page 33

Life’s scoreboard

4min
page 32

The metals of Christmas

4min
pages 30-31

Z Cars at 60

6min
pages 24-25

The heyday of Studio 54

6min
pages 28-29

My husband’s sad death at

4min
page 27

Back to university at 68

4min
page 26

Christmas quotes

5min
pages 22-23

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6

In search of a good carer

4min
pages 20-21

Hello, grim reaper

4min
page 19

Bliss on Toast

2min
pages 7-8

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
pages 10-11

My part in Oliver

7min
pages 16-18

Unhappy birthdays in

3min
pages 12-13

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9
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