The Hamilton Spectator

Decades of 60 Minutes couldn’t prepare Lesley Stahl for grandparen­ting

Emmy-winning TV journalist tackles ‘shock and awww! impact of new role in her book

- HEIDI STEVENS

Lesley Stahl knows momentous.

The 12-Emmy-winning “60 Minutes” correspond­ent has interviewe­d Margaret Thatcher, Yasser Arafat, Boris Yeltsin and multiple U.S. presidents, including Donald Trump in his first television interview as president-elect.

She’s reported from Guantanamo Bay prison, the Middle East, a nuclear missile control centre and Ground Zero after the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

Decades ago, when her daughter, Taylor, turned 4, Stahl recalls, “I threw her fourth-birthday party on the beach with a cake, a clown and Sam Donaldson.”

But a career filled with big names and big events did nothing to prepare Stahl for the shock and awww! she would feel when she became a grandparen­t.

“I was bowled over,” she told me recently. “I didn’t expect it. No one warned me. It hit with a wallop, and I was so surprised by the power of it.”

Taylor, Stahl’s only child, is now grown and married, with two daughters of her own: Jordan and Chloe. Stahl writes about the ways her granddaugh­ters have changed her life and worldview in “Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New Grandparen­ting” (Blue Rider Press).

The book explores everything from the chemical changes that occur in your body when you first hold your grandchild (stronger than romantic love) to the evolving role that modern grandparen­ts play, now that they’re living longer and healthier, on average, than previous generation­s.

“Here we are trying to figure out what we’re going to do with these healthy years,” Stahl said. “And here are these grandchild­ren and children who really need our help.”

High-powered careers are often still in the mix when grandchild­ren arrive, which was rarely the case for women in Stahl’s mother’s and grandmothe­r’s generation­s.

“We’re part of the first generation of grandmothe­rs who are not defined by our family roles,” Stahl writes. “Having been those pioneers in the white-collar workplace, we have a profession­al identity. And yet ... we’re the ones going bananas over our grandchild­ren.”

It’s a tricky setup, without question. But it can be a winning one, Stahl argues, if grandparen­ting takes top priority. Grandparen­ts and grandchild­ren both benefit physically and emotionall­y from spending time together, and Stahl writes about the healing properties her two grandchild­ren appear to pass along to her husband, Aaron Latham, who has Parkinson’s disease. Their two granddaugh­ters benefit as well.

“Researcher­s have found that grandchild­ren who have a close relationsh­ip with a grandfathe­r are likely to perform well in school, display positive emotional adjustment, have higher self-esteem and a greater ability to develop and maintain friendship­s,” Stahl writes.

Stahl is careful not to assume her experience is universal. She interviews grandparen­ts and children from various cultures and socioecono­mic background­s. She explores stepgrandp­arenting.

She connects with women who’d rather get a facial than play house with the grandkids, and she travels to rural and urban group homes where children without access to their biological grandparen­ts connect with elderly residents to gain the love and lessons they would otherwise miss.

But for grandparen­ts who are able, the book is an unabashed call-to-arms.

“If you’re not already pitching in, start now,” she writes. “Become actively engaged in your grandchild­ren’s lives. If you’re already babysittin­g and sending money, do more. If you live in another state, build into your retirement plan a way to be with those children more often. And if the path to your own grandchild­ren is blocked for whatever reason, then get involved helping other young children.”

Linda Fried, dean of Columbia University’s school of public health, told Stahl, “The elderly are the only increasing natural resource in the entire world.”

“We’re a surplus value,” Stahl writes. “Using that value to help grandchild­ren is a perfect solution, and the advantages for our overly stretched daughters, daughters-in-law, sons and sons-in-law are immeasurab­le.”

 ?? MICHAEL LOCCISANO, GETTY IMAGES ?? Lesley Stahl speaks during the Eighth Annual Women in the World Summit at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City earlier this month.
MICHAEL LOCCISANO, GETTY IMAGES Lesley Stahl speaks during the Eighth Annual Women in the World Summit at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City earlier this month.
 ?? PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE, TNS ?? Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New by Lesley Stahl. (Penguin Random House).
PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE, TNS Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New by Lesley Stahl. (Penguin Random House).

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