I don't have grandkids, just nieces and nephews and a large extended family with lots of little kiddos. Some of my family members think I'm a problem all the way around and while most have never said they don't want me around their kids, they never invite me along either.
My brother said just after the first of hid daughter that he wasn't sure he could "risk" letting his child around someone who had to "go to a hospital" - and he further explained he was referring to when I was hospitalized for being suicidal as a teenager, 17 years ago. 17 YEARS ago. When I was a TEENAGER. I asked why was he bringing that up now, despite 17 years of never expressing a concern. He said he was just rethinking things since having his own kids made it different. He told me there was nothing about the past 17 years that concerned him, just that fact. He spoke of my hospitalization like he was traumatized by it - and frankly, he is just beginning his own healing journey on the trauma he survived as a kid.
It hurt beyond words. I told him, it's his choice, he is free to make it, and I'm glad that as new daddy he wants to protect his daughter. I told him that I'm not a parent myself, but I sure want to protect the kids I work with.
I just left it at that.
He came back later on and invited me along.
Another family member did the same thing - after more than a decade of no concerns, referred to when I was a suicidal teenager and the birth of their kids as why they didn't want me around. With them, I broke down sobbing \and told them they were hurtful jerks... um... yeah... I have not been able to repair that relationship... and I honestly don't want to anymore. It hurts, deeply, but I am not going to spend the rest of my life chasing them.
Most of the rest of the family knows I work with kids as a profession and they sort of cut the nonsense about it now that I work with kids as a profession.
The stuff about kids though is a symptom of deeper problems. None of those are resolved so while sometimes I am around the kids, it is still painful as hell and they find new ways to scapegoat me. It's hard, sometimes it is worth it, sometimes it doesn't seem like it. It does make me want to protect and fight for the safety of the abused children I work with all the more.