Oct 2006
Meet The Grandparents
by Tim Murphy
AIDS stole their parents. Now, the enduring
children—some of them HIV positive themselves—are coming of age. The
heartbreaking and backbreaking job of raising them has made fierce warriors out
of unusual suspects: their grandmothers—and other older relatives
Welcome to Florida's West Palm Beach, tony Palm Beach’s grittier neighbor,
where one-fifth of the population lives below the poverty line, where the
AIDS infection rate is among the highest in the nation and where, after
nearly 15 years on the streets, Roxanne Mathis is home again.
Prostituting herself for crack money, Roxanne, now 32, ignored not only her
own HIV diagnosis but that of her son, Brian, who tested positive at birth,
in 1992. Now, finally, they’re under the same roof again.
“I’ve been clean for over a year now,” she says, laughing, “and it feels
wonderful.” Brian’s reaction is a tad more subdued—he has just turned 14 and
calls himself “the quiet type”—but he agrees that he’s happy too. Isn’t he
angry that his mom was gone so long? Nah, Brian says: “I knew she would be
coming back.”
Besides, he wasn’t exactly alone. Meet the undisputed head of this modest
three-bedroom apartment and an emblem of the ever-evolving HIV family:
Brian’s 54-year-old grandmother, Alice Thompson. Most people call her Miss
Alice. She raised Brian while Roxanne, her daughter, was gone. She stayed by
him when he was hospitalized at 3 weeks old with PCP pneumonia, when “you
couldn’t even see his little body for the tubes,” Miss Alice remembers. She
vowed that he wouldn’t die an early death—and, she recalls, “nourished him,
gave him all the love I had and some I didn’t think I had.” She nursed him
back to health when he was hospitalized again at 12, for a month, with a
life-threatening staph infection. She fought his battles with school
officials and sought out doctors and counselors and a special summer camp
for kids affected by HIV. She kept him out of the foster care system,
dreaded by every child whose parents can’t parent.
She’s the one Brian calls Mom.
Miss Alice is not alone. Grandparents or other relatives are raising more
than 2.5 million American children—an 86% jump from 1990, according to
census data analyzed by the Children’s Defense Fund. Just how many of those
scenarios are driven by HIV/AIDS is hard to determine. But if you factor in
the Centers for Disease Control’s estimate that nearly 200,000 women have
been diagnosed with AIDS from the epidemic’s start through 2004 and then
consider that nearly 30% of all those newly infected with HIV in the United
States are women and that 75% of those women have children, a sobering
picture emerges.
To be sure, the tragedy of the AIDS orphan is hardly a new one. And its
impact in America, ever since lifesaving drug combos began to arrive, has
been eclipsed by the wrenching news from Africa: Some 18 million children
there could be orphaned to AIDS by decade’s end, according to UNICEF,
leaving many to their grandparents’ care. Perhaps that’s why the New York
Times no longer runs domestic stories like the one from 1994 correctly
estimating that up to 125,000 U.S. children would lose their mothers to AIDS
by the year 2000 or the one telling of a booming New Jersey support group
for such children and their grandparents that has since disbanded. But that
doesn’t mean that the phenomenon has died here in the U.S., especially, the
data suggest, among African-American families, with their strong maternal
hierarchy.
In some way, these households reflect a new era in the U.S., where HIV
positive women—often poor and beset by other challenges, including
depression and drug addiction—adhere to their HIV regimens just enough to
avert the swift AIDS deaths of the past. Many grandparents have raised HIV
positive grandchildren well into their teen years, reflecting not just the
success of modern HIV drugs but the fact that these children were born just
before it was discovered that giving HIV drugs to both delivering mothers
and their newborns could prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission in the
first place. But only now are these homes beginning to get the full
financial, legal and emotional support they desperately need and deserve.
Indeed, says Donna Butts, executive director of Generations United, a
national group that advocates for grandparent caregivers, such elders save
the U.S. billions of dollars a year in foster care expenses.
The Second Time Around
Sounding a national call for such households,
POZ heard from retired, married
grandmas like Newark’s stoic, flinty Geneva Morrison, 67, who raised her HIV
positive granddaughter, Shanti, now 22, after her mother, Angela, died of
AIDS in 1987. We heard from single working grandmas like Chicago’s Karen,
52, a Native American raising her two HIV negative teenage granddaughters
after their mother died of AIDS in 2000. (Their mother refused to take HIV
meds, says Karen, who, like some others interviewed for this story, asked
that we not use her full name.)
We heard from the irrepressible divorcée Shirley Black (“just like Shirley
Temple Black,” she giggles), 57, of Riviera Beach, Florida, who logged many
miles as a flight attendant in order to raise her HIV positive 19-year-old
niece, Star, in middle-class comfort after Star’s mother (Shirley’s younger
sister, Sonya) died of AIDS in 1993. An accomplished violinist and aspiring
pediatrician, Star has just finished her freshman year at a private college
in Florida.
But we also heard from grandmothers who have raised grandchildren while
their HIV positive daughters tangled with some combination of drug
addiction, incarceration and mental illness that left them unable or
unwilling to parent their own children. Grandmas like Miss Alice or like
North Carolina’s exhausted, exasperated Mary (who asked that her real name
not be used because HIV is “a hush-hush” in her rural town), 74, who is
raising two teenage granddaughters—the elder HIV positive but both full of
“anger, anger, anger, anger,” she says. Like Roxanne, Mary’s daughter is
also in drug recovery and visits Mary and her daughters regularly.
AIDS increases the burden on these families, which must confront not only
the grief of deceased or troubled children and a disease that can be
difficult to treat in young people but also such issues as shame, stigma,
secrecy and disclosure. Deborah Langosch, PhD,LCSW, a New York City social
worker who has worked closely with women raising grandchildren whose parents
have died of AIDS, says the disease “complicated the bereavement process for
them. They felt that they couldn’t let people know and were very isolated in
their grief. It caused more depression and anxiety in them [than in peers
whose children had been lost to cancer] and sometimes less ability to
understand the value in talking about the loss with the grandchildren. They
kept a stiff upper lip and felt that if they talked about it, they would
open the floodgates and not be able to raise their grandkids the way they
wanted to.”
Strength in Older Numbers
Langosch and others who have worked with women raising grandchildren
orphaned by AIDS will tell you this: They are remarkably strong, resourceful
women, equipped with seemingly limitless reserves of love and excellent
coping skills. Weakness isn’t an option, left as they are to raise
grandchildren at a time when their own physical stamina is often declining.
Says Aunt Shirley of raising Star,
“It’s not like I had a choice. I don’t know anybody that would have taken
care of my baby like I did.”
What’s more, only a few states provide households like theirs with special
financial support, whereas nonrelated foster parents receive hundreds of
federal dollars a month. On top of that, grandparents who lack legal custody
of their grandchildren have a limited say in their upbringing; and even when
grandparents have a shot at custody, obtaining it is daunting without
outside support.
With all these challenges, how do these women manage to cope? Often, with a
profound religious faith. Says Langosch, “These grandmothers would come in
and tell you stories so tragic and traumatic, and many would say that if
they didn’t believe in God they would have given up a long time ago.”
Newark’s Geneva Morrison says, “I’ve been in support groups, and I go to
church and believe in God. I also believe there’s nothing wrong with crying,
and I’ve done my share of that. Cry, just as long as you pull yourself up
and get back to living.”
And she has another coping tool: shopping binges at the nearby Salvation
Army thrift store. “Whenever I go there, I run into all the other shopping
addicts,” she laughs.
Hers is a harmless outlet. But many grandmother caregivers cope by drinking.
“One said to me, ‘It’s just me and my bottle at night. That’s how I put
myself to sleep.’ It’s a medication against depression and anxiety,” says
Langosch. “We need to give them support groups and counseling and whatever
else they need to find healthier ways of coping,” she adds.
Langosch also says that it is not unusual for such grandmothers to have
their own history of drug use. That was the case with Miss Alice, whose
crack habit in earlier years played a role in her decision to send young
Roxanne to live with relatives. “I did what I thought was right at the
time,” says Miss Alice, who, in a sad irony, kicked her habit just as a
teenage Roxanne was beginning her own.
Such tales speak to the darker, sadder side of these Teflon grandmas. Their
grandmotherly love can keep them from directing inner stores of anger and
grief directly at their grandchildren. Those with HIV positive
grandchildren, especially, have learned how to channel that anger outward
toward an AIDS-phobic society.
“They become the best advocates,” says Langosch. “They’re out there; they
talk about it; they break through barriers.”
Aunt Shirley proudly recalls how she stood up to a high school band teacher
who knew that Star was HIV positive and didn’t want her going with the band
on a trip to perform in New York City because he feared taking
responsibility if Star got sick. “I had a meeting with the principal and
called him out on it,” Aunt Shirley says, the old fight rising up in her
usually sweet voice. Star made the trip—with one of the top pediatric AIDS
doctors in New York City on call for her.
Miss Alice, Morrison, Aunt Shirley and Mary have all attended, or even
founded, support groups for “AIDS grandmas” like themselves. They have also
taken their grandkids numerous times to special camps for families affected
by AIDS, such as Minnesota’s Camp Heartland or Florida’s Friends-Together.
Despite scant personal resources, they get their grandchildren and sometimes
themselves the support they need.
Cursed or Blessed?
But just because they don't direct their frustrations at their grandkids
doesn’t mean those resentments and regrets don’t persist. Some grandparents
handle them better than others. “You ask yourself, ‘Why is this happening to
me?’ ” says Morrison. “But then you realize that if it’s happened to someone
else, why shouldn’t it happen to you? You don’t pick and choose what’s going
to happen to you. You deal with it.” Aunt Shirley calls her fate “a
blessing,” adding, “I feel like my life would be so empty [without Star].”
Yet Mary and Karen are struggling with teenage girls who are acting out in
all sorts of ways, and Mary is feeling the strain. “As you get older,” she
says, “you don’t have the patience to deal with young people—especially the
ones that I know of with HIV. They’re angry. They feel like they’ve missed
out on a lot, being disconnected from their parents, and it comes out.”
Among the HIV positive grandchildren mentioned here, only Brian and Star
spoke to POZ. Neither seemed gripped
by the same outward anger that Mary described in her granddaughter. But they
both acknowledged their tremendous anxiety about disclosing their HIV status
among their peers. Asked what the hardest thing is about having HIV, Brian
says, “Not being able to tell anybody or not having a lot of friends you can
trust” and confided that he liked Friends-Together because “I got friends
there I can share with.” Star, who has told few friends of her HIV status,
related a hilarious story. When she was out sick in high school due to AIDS
complications, her schoolmates, thinking that she suffered from sickle-cell
anemia, held a fundraiser for the disease in her honor.
Then there’s the issue of getting the kids to pop their HIV pills, which all
the grandkids avoid to varying degrees. To hear Mary tell it, her
granddaughter seems the most resistant: “She refuses to take them,” she
says, distraught. “Her attitude the past three years is that she would just
rather die.” As for Brian, now that he’s taking an antidepressant and seeing
a counselor twice a week, he seems to be taking his meds more easily, says
Miss Alice. Before, she says, he refused them, saying “I’m just going to die
anyway.”
Had he really said that? “When people get depressed,” Brian answers, “they
say stuff that comes off their heads.” Being told that if he took his meds
regularly, he would likely live a normal life span, he said he felt a little
better. He wants to go to college, he says, and be a lawyer and become “the
richest boy on the planet.” Oh, and be a hip-hop artist too—“like Lil’ Bow
Wow.”
Generation Next
A more supportive climate may await families like these. A bill introduced
in
2004 by senators Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-New York) and Olympia Snowe
(R-Maine) would ensure that grandparent caregivers get financial assistance
comparable to that received by foster parents. Another current congressional
proposal would lower from 60 to 55 the age at which grandparent caregivers
could receive certain support services—an acknowledgment that such
caregivers are often far younger than 60. The LEGACY Act, passed in 2003,
may create more grandkid-friendly senior housing, such as a model
residential program expressly for low-income grandparents raising
grandchildren that opened recently in the Bronx. And in many localities,
child-welfare agencies are easing the bureaucracy that stymies grandparents
trying to get custody of their grandchildren, realizing that children may be
better off living with loving kin than strangers, even if Grandma’s
apartment doesn’t fit every legal specification.
Meanwhile, for households like Aunt Shirley’s and Karen’s, life goes on. “I
miss my sister Sonya a lot,” says Aunt Shirley, “but I always tell [Star]
stories about her, and I always introduce [Star] to friends by saying, ‘This
is Sonya’s baby—and I’m very proud of her.’ ”
Prodigal daughters and mothers are typically welcomed back into households
like Miss Alice’s, where forgiveness appears to trump bitterness. “It’s
wonderful,” says Miss Alice of having Roxanne back after all these years.
“Like a child that’s been in another country and has finally come home.”
Miss Alice trusts that Roxanne has kicked crack for good this time—“she’s
more mature; her attitude has changed; and she’s not around any of her [bad
influence] friends”—adding that she’s not angry about being left to raise
Brian for 14 years. “I was hurting when Roxanne was in that [addicted]
state,” she says, “but I never gave up on her.”
As for Roxanne, she knows she has a lot of catching up to do with both Miss
Alice and Brian. For now, she’s happy just being home with them to watch
TV—reruns of Little House on the Prairie, Miss Alice’s favorite show, or
Family Guy, which cracks Brian up. Roxanne knows that someday she’ll have to
explain to him where she was all those years. “How do you tell your child
that Mommy was prostituting herself for money and drugs?” she asks. “That’s
not easy.”
It may not be as hard as she thinks. Asked what he’d most like to tell his
mother, Brian replies, “Even though you think I never loved you, I do.” And
to his grandmother? “I’m thankful for what you did for me, and I love you
for it, and I’ll never change.”
Miss Alice tears up when she hears the message. She has her own message for
grandmothers who find themselves in her situation: “If you have a daughter
or son who’s struggling and they have a kid, that kid is a part of you. You
take that kid, and you love him because once that kid finds out that he’s
loved, that’s going to give him a reason to live.”