THE BELL CURVE
joseph n. bell
My 19-year-old grandson, Trevor, came visiting recently a few days
before classes started at the University of San Francisco, where he is
enrolled as a freshman. His visit coincided with the start of classes for
the senior year of my stepson, Erik, at Occidental College. The
confluence of these two events, along with the talks my wife and I had
with each of these young men, both clarified and muddied my simultaneous
dual role as a grandfather and ersatz father. I’m still trying to sort
out the lessons thus learned.
Although most of the topics discussed were unique to each individual
situation, one overarching problem was common to both and epitomized the
need for a breadth of understanding. This was the problem of money. Never
before have I seen so clearly the stresses that operate on each side of
this equation.
Both of these young men are responsible citizens. Erik, especially,
has converted academic achievements to strong scholarship support. Both
have worked when they could throughout their school years to earn side
money. But they are also products of their time. They have grown up in a
period of unparalleled national prosperity in upper-middle class
communities and schools. Everything they do -- from movies to school
books to car insurance -- is breathtakingly expensive. In this milieu,
small triumphs don’t even occur to them. The telephone, for example, is
an instrument to use when you need it, not when rates are low. They don’t
look at prices on menus or buy cheap seats in theaters or delay much of
anything they are dead set on doing.
And astride all this is the stupefying, mind-blowing cost of a college
education today. I’m not interested here in arguing the economically
persuasive option of a community college. Our choice of Occidental was
mutual and we have never regretted it, even though the tuition has gone
up several thousand dollars each year. There will be substantial loans to
pay off, and the reality of that seemed to reach Erik for the first time
as he entered his final year. But it was absolutely the right decision
for him.
Trevor, too, has a special talent that sent him to San Francisco with
the strong support of his parents. When the design school he attended
lost its accreditation, he turned to USF to hone a different facet of
that talent. And so we have a formula for stress: a young person thinking
independently and grown to manhood or womanhood who is totally dependent
on someone else -- usually with a different set of economic values -- for
money to meet even their most basic needs.
This means, for example, if they have a fender-bender that may or may
not have been their fault, they have to ask for money to pay the
increased insurance premium. Or to attend a concert they want badly to
see and can’t afford. Or to buy a special book full of enrichment.
When Erik got a series of parking tickets and the notices came to our
house, I chewed him out for this expensive carelessness. He said he would
take care of the tickets -- and did. But that just means when he later
runs out of money as a result, we will have to come to his rescue. He
knows that, and so he listens stoically to the lecture because he can’t
yet pay for his own mistakes or excesses.
All this is humiliating to the young adult and irritating to the
parent. And it’s going to happen, no matter how foolproof a system you
evolve. “This is all you get and if you manage it badly, tough.” “You
figure it out” sounds like a mantra for all occasions. Give it a try. And
good luck.
Of course this is parent talk. Grandparent talk, I’ve discovered, is
quite different. Grandparents can be permissive, bemused, and perhaps a
little relieved they aren’t the first line of defense. I can’t remember
when my three children were small if I was as sure of my parental
responsibilities and how to discharge them properly as Steve Smith
appears to be with his small ones. I doubt it. But I do know that being a
grandparent has softened my stances with my stepson. He may not believe
that, but it is true.
I still have to fight saying: “When I was your age I was flying a Navy
plane in a war. And if there hadn’t been a war, I would have been working
my way through college.” I doubt if I would have added that my tuition at
the University of Missouri was $300 and my total expenses not much more
than twice that -- which adds up to about one-fiftieth of what it is
costing these young people in my life today to go to college.
I still experience some confusion in my roles. We took Trevor to an
area of Los Angeles he wanted to visit to celebrate his birthday, and my
wife slipped him $40 before he took off while we lingered over a drink.
When he returned, he had blown the whole $40 on one shirt, and I gave him
the “why didn’t you save it to pay your overdue phone bill” lecture. This
aggravated my wife and dismayed my grandson.
Next time, I’ll get it right.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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