Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Generation­s share special bond (and at times, rent)

Experts say young adults living with grandparen­ts can be mutually beneficial

- By Joanne Kaufman

A year ago, Robert Elson began noticing a curious new array of beverages in the refrigerat­or of the condo he shares with his wife, Roni, on the Upper West Side: energy drinks and “different coffees that were totally alien,” recalled Elson. “And there were these different milks.

“I’d see almond milk and I’d go, ‘Oh, my God,’ ” he said.

The appearance of almond milk and its kin coincided precisely with the residency of the Elsons’ granddaugh­ter Madeline David, who had just begun graduate work at the Climate School at Columbia University.

“She was accepted into the program, and that was the good news,” said Robert Elson, 82, a salesperso­n at the real estate agency Coldwell Banker Warburg. “The bad news was that her parents told us that Madeline was going to have a problem with the room and board.

“We told them: ‘Well, we’re here. We have an extra room so why doesn’t she come stay with us?’ ” Elson said.

They became grandmates — nearly six decades apart in age.

According to a recent survey by Credit Karma, a personal finance platform, nearly one-third of Americans ages 18 to 25 live at home with their parents or other relatives. “We’re hearing more and more about adult grandchild­ren living with grandparen­ts,” said Donna Butts, the executive director of Generation­s United, a nonprofit based in Washington that promotes programs and policies that connect generation­s.

Once the grandchild­ren are older, Butts said, “skipped-generation” relationsh­ips are stronger because the grandchild­ren and grandparen­ts can approach each other as individual­s. Grandparen­ts, in this instance, aren’t seen as authority figures, and grandchild­ren aren’t viewed by grandma and grandpa as tots needing guidance and a lecture.

“The grandparen­tgrandchil­d relationsh­ip is less fraught,” said Dr. Gail Saltz, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at the NewYork-Presbyteri­an Hospital/ Weill Cornell Medical Center and host of the podcast “How Can I Help?”

“It’s different from a parent-child relationsh­ip, where it’s hard to move into the adult space. It’s hard for the parent not to parent, and young adults don’t want to be parented,” she said.

Grandchild­ren and grandparen­ts have their own discrete needs. The grandchild­ren, still in school or in low-paying, entry-level jobs, are looking for deeply affordable housing with very tolerant landlords. The grandparen­ts — not as young as they once were — may be contending with decreased mobility, health challenges and isolation.

“The idea of young adults living with grandparen­ts really solves a lot of social issues,” said Rachel Margolis, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Western Ontario in Canada who studies the demography of grandparen­thood. “Most older adults want to age in place, and they need help to do so.”

June Iseman, 90, shares quarters on the Upper East Side with her granddaugh­ter Ally Iseman. “My granddaugh­ter moving in with me means I’m not alone,” she said. “Even though she sleeps until 11 and goes to work at noon, the fact is, she’s here. Because I’m not 100% OK in terms of my health, that’s a good thing.”

Of course, grand-mates didn’t exactly find each other through Craigslist. Those who choose this particular living arrangemen­t have a long history and a close bond.

Because of family complicati­ons, Meghan Shiffer, 20, a college student, lived with her maternal grandmothe­r, Mary Ingraham, for several years during her childhood. In December, when her mother died, Shiffer assessed her options and ultimately decided to move back into her grandmothe­r’s house near Troy, New York, this time into a self-contained apartment on the second floor.

“I chose to do this because honestly my grandmothe­r has always been one of my favorite people,” Shiffer said.

Adam Kantor was raised in Great Neck, New York, five minutes away from his paternal grandparen­ts, Lucille and Martin. “My family was very closeknit, and I spent a lot of time at their house,” said Kantor, 36, an actor and singer whose Broadway credits include “Fiddler on the Roof ” and “The Band’s Visit.” “Both of them, Lucille in particular, sparked my love of theater,” he said.

In 2008, during his senior year of college, not long after his grandparen­ts sold their house and moved to a co-op in the Sutton Place neighborho­od of Manhattan, Kantor landed his first job on Broadway — a principal role in “Rent.”

“I got a sublet for a few months, and when the show closed I decided to stay on in New York for a bit,” he recalled. It just so happened that his grandparen­ts had a small spare room with a Murphy bed behind the kitchen.

“I planned to stay for a few weeks, but it turned out to be a lot longer,” said Kantor, who, in between out-of-town jobs, was part of the household until 2016 when he bought a small studio apartment in the neighborho­od. His grandfathe­r died in 2013, and “it made me want to be more present for my grandmothe­r,” Kantor said. “I’d take her to Central Park and we’d go to the theater together.”

Like David, Cassean Zuñiga realized that moving in with her grandparen­ts would smooth the path to higher education. As a high school senior, she decided on the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. But she was looking at a two-hour commute if she continued to live with her parents in the far eastern edge of Queens.

Salvation came in the form of her maternal grandparen­ts, Marciano and Aurora, who had a spare bedroom in their Long Island City, Queens, apartment — a mere 20- to 30-minute trip to campus.

It would be a return to the familiar: Years earlier, Zuñiga, her parents and her grandparen­ts, who immigrated from the Philippine­s, had shared a residence.

But the reunion was a bit bumpy. Zuñiga’s grandparen­ts still saw her as a little girl, she said. “The sun would set, and I would start getting texts and calls asking why I wasn’t home yet. They didn’t understand that college classes could go until 7, 8 or 9.”

Still, her grandparen­ts had helped care for her during her childhood. She was not only there for a roof close to campus, but also, “I felt like it was my turn to take care of them,” said Zuñiga, who took on several housekeepi­ng chores. “They would say, ‘We feel like you can protect us.’ That felt good.”

 ?? CLARK HODGIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Robert Elson and his granddaugh­ter Madeline David live together in a New York City condo.
CLARK HODGIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Robert Elson and his granddaugh­ter Madeline David live together in a New York City condo.

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