Waiting in the lobby of the jail to be allowed access for a
visit with an inmate isn’t much fun. It is required that one be there more than
20 minutes before the visit or be turned away. People-watching to pass the time may be
interesting, but is also sometimes depressing.
Yesterday as I waited for the visit time for female inmates,
I was reading a book, but observing others in the lobby also. Two young girls, I would guess their ages at
8 and 11, were waiting with women I surmised to be their grandmothers, although
I suppose great-grandmothers might have been possible depending on how closely
together the generations were crammed. I
assumed the women were waiting to see their daughters, who were mothers to the
granddaughters.
I thought both grandmothers to be younger than I am, but
both looked haggard. Both granddaughters
were pretty much out of control. They
had difficulty sitting still, talked loudly, and in general, made their
presence more obvious than socially appropriate. Neither grandmother had much success
controlling the behaviors. One girl had
on a headset and was listening to music, but she was also singing along loudly,
and grandma had no luck quieting her down.
Eventually the two grandmothers began talking to each
other. One said caring for her
granddaughter was like taking care of 50.
The other said taking care of hers was like caring for 60. The grandmother of the girl listening to
music said her granddaughter was ADHD and that listening to music was the only
thing that calmed her at all. I guess I
wouldn’t want to be around when she wasn’t listening to music.
Please understand, I am not being critical about their
inability to control the girls’ behaviors.
I raised a girl with ADHD, and I well remember the struggle. But….I was the mother, not the
grandmother. These poor women are
attempting to raise kids at a time in their lives when strength and energy are
diminishing. The fact that they are
visiting daughters who are incarcerated probably means they struggled as
mothers, and now they are repeating the process when they are even less able to
cope.
This is a huge and overwhelming problem for our
society. Young women can now rejoice in
their sexual freedom and the fact that being a single mom doesn’t have the
stigma it once did. They feel they can
make whatever decisions they wish, and that it is their business. They don’t see how it will impact their own
mothers. Young men don’t have a sense of
responsibility that ought to go with impregnating a woman. We now have two generations….maybe three…that
have trashed their own lives and those of the children they are abandoning to
an older generation that is weary.
I grieve for the grandparents whose lives are sucked into this
chaos, and for the children who have no father, a mother in jail, and no sense
of right and wrong….perhaps no ability to think clearly enough to realize that
having a meaningful life is actually possible.
Poor choices on the part of some of my own family members
have put me in contact with many young people who are in despair and see little
hope for their future. Addictions to
drugs and alcohol may temporarily diminish their pain, but over the long haul, these
problems add to the pain and to the inability to make rational decisions.
I know what the answer is….but getting them to consider it
is pretty difficult.
Jesus said….I have
come that they may have life, and have it to the full. John 10:10