Grandmothers and Grandsons: How to Build a Close Relationship By Susan “Honey” Good Most of you know I have┬ágrandchildren┬áfrom my┬áfirst marriage. My husband, my ultimate concierge, has┬áseven ΓÇ£grandsΓÇ¥ from his first marriage. We were both widowed.┬áWe blended two families. With the grandchildren, it was a delight.┬áI decided, for a few reasons,┬áto write about some of my husbandΓÇÖs grandsons because they are an important part of my life and I want to reassure grandmothers in second marriages,┬áthat relationships in a blended family can grow and flourish. Nothing in our lives happens by waving a magic┬áwand. You have to want it.┬áAnd,┬áfor the sake of your marriage and for the needs┬áof┬áthe┬ágrandchildren, the more grandmothers are involved the merrier family life will be for all. With open honesty, I must tell you┬ámy husbandΓÇÖs grandsons┬áhave earned my love and respect 10 times over.┬áIf I┬áwished┬áupon a star,┬áI could not┬áhave asked for┬ámore loving and respectful grandchildren.┬áI am their grandmother and they are my grandsons. I believe this happened because of their mother,┬ámy darling daughter-in-law Jami, encouraging the relationship. Secondly, I was the granddaughter of a┬ástep-grandmother who showered me with love. Her example boded me well. I am also close to┬áJoe,┬áanother grandson, and┬áthe Good BoysΓÇÖ cousin. My relationship with Joe developed differently than with the Good Boys and I will explain later in my story how. The ΓÇÿGood Boys,ΓÇÖ as I call them,┬áare good┬áboys.┬áScott, Logan, and David are brothers and JamiΓÇÖs sons.┬á Joe is┬áthe┬áson of my husbandΓÇÖs son.┬áThe boys┬álive across the USAΓǪDavid in┬áManhattan,┬áScott┬áwith his wife Katie in┬áAustin, Texas and┬áLogan and┬áhis wife┬áAnn live in┬áBloomington,┬áIndiana. Joe is a student at the London School of Economics and┬álives┬áin London, England but is a native Californian. A grandmotherΓÇÖs relationship with her grandsons SCOTT GOOD: When ScottΓÇÖs father died we became confidants. He,┬álike his brothers,┬ásuffered.┬áScott shared┬áhis suffering.┬áHe would call me and we would talk for long periods of time. I listened. I understood. I tried to be helpful. On a happier note, when he wanted to go into┬áa second business part-time, I encouraged him against his grandfatherΓÇÖs wishes. We bonded further. I would tell him, ΓÇ£Go for it.┬áI think you have a great idea, ┬ájust keep your main job.ΓÇ¥ Scott is now married to Katie. Katie is the prescription Scott needed.┬áThey are madly in love.┬áHe┬ácontinues to work at has his main job and has the time to be an entrepreneur.┬áHis┬ágrandfather, my ultimate concierge, is elated by his success warning him to grow slowly,┬áto have plenty of insurance, and to save his money.┬áI am his cheerleader grandmother. He knows he can come to me for anything and I will be there┬áto give my honest advice. I know he would help me if I asked.┬áHe cares.┬áHe will phone for no reason and that is the best.┬áI love Scott. LOGAN GOOD: He is grounded. He is┬áa banker, an artist, and a dog lover. Logan is very charitable,┬átotally in love with his wife, Annie, and caring and┬áhelpful┬áto his grandfather and to me. He is as steady as they come. He is grateful, dependable, and loves family. He married into a family with 12 children and every Sunday night helps his mother-in-law cook dinner. Each year he flies out to California and spends a week with us.┬áHe always arrives with a gift. Last year it was an oil painting of Orchid that hangs in a special place where I write.┬á┬áHe calls often and texts.┬áHe writes beautiful and thoughtful messages. Last year he made my birthday┬ácard and made my day with his handwritten thoughts. The card is displayed on my memory shelf.┬á┬áHe showers us with love by doing and not forgetting. He always says ΓÇ£love youΓÇ¥ when we say goodbye on the phone.┬áHe is a┬áperfect┬ájewel of a grandson. I love Logan. DAVID GOOD:┬á┬áHe is a digital artist┬áand brand specialist┬áliving in the Big Apple.┬á┬áWe┬átalk on┬áthe phone for at least an hour at a time.┬áI┬áremember walking┬áin Chicago┬áon a cold day,┬ámy hands freezing, as I held my phone┬áto my ear┬áfor an hour as he described his┬áfirst big job┬áopportunity┬áafter┬ágraduating┬ácollege. We discussed the long┬ádrive┬áhe would have to make┬áversus the opportunity and I helped him think out his decision. He helps me with ideas for my Instagram; we discuss art,┬áour travels, and our┬ácareers. We laugh and chatter on and on.┬á┬áHe makes me think and wonder.┬áI love our talks. They have depth and we have a committed bond.┬áI love David. JOE GOOD: Joe Good used to be called Joey Good. About five months ago I got an email. ΓÇ£Honey, do you think I should go by Joey, Joe or Joseph Good.ΓÇ¥ I wrote back, ΓÇ£Joe.ΓÇ¥┬á┬áAnd, Joe it is. We are close. We discuss everything, even politics, going back and forth on issues.┬á┬áThis bond developed when his grandfather sent him to the University of Haifa in Israel for a yearΓÇÖs study abroad. Joe and I became pen pals┬áover that year, writing long weekly emails to one another. We talked about everything and we bonded. He is now in London and┬ácalls almost every Sunday to check in on us, to see how we are. Joe and I can talk an hour at a time and we do. He has traveled the world and so has his fortunate and grateful ┬áHoney. I will get a call or an email, ΓÇ£What did you think of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia? I have the opportunity to visit.ΓÇ¥ And, I will tell him about the city and┬átell him to go. Every city has its own wonderfulness.┬áWe talk personal about the family and I like that.┬áI love Joe. Well, darlings, that is a short biography of the Good Boys and my unique relationship with each of them.┬áAs I said at the beginning of my musing,┬áI am so lucky to have them in my life. And as their grandfather tells everyone, ΓÇ£When the boys have a problem, they donΓÇÖt come to me, they go to Honey.ΓÇ¥ When I hear that my heart truly pounds with joy. As a step-grandmother ( I do not like the term)┬áyou are in the driverΓÇÖs seat. You have to reach out┬áand try┬átwice as hard as the grandchildren,┬áyou have to┬ábe honest and real,┬áyou have to┬áearn their acceptance and┬áyou have to┬áshower them with nurturing love.┬áYour ultimate goal is to live, laugh and love with your ΓÇ£grands. Susan “Honey” Good is the founder of┬áHoneyGood.com┬áwhere this blog originally appeared. The site is a collection of lessons learned, life advice and insights from not only her, but from a fantastic group of contributing writers, each adding their own spice to the recipe.┬áHoney Good.com representing ΓÇ£a family tree of┬áwomenΓÇ¥ — wives, mothers, daughters, granddaughters, mothers-in-law, daughters-in-law, sisters, aunts, cousins and girlfriends — coming together to talk about what┬ámakes them tick as well as what they have in common. Honey Good discusses┬álife experiences with wisdom, humor and intellect, enabling all┬áto attain┬áa “Honey Good Style of Life.ΓÇ¥