Jay Payleitner: As great-grandparents, your mother & father are passing on the generational baton. Be prepared and consider yourself blessed.

At the National Association for Grandparenting, we seek to validate and empower grandparents as they bond with future generations in meaningful ways and leave a lasting positive legacy.
Jay Payleitner: As great-grandparents, your mother & father are passing on the generational baton. Be prepared and consider yourself blessed.
When we fully commit to being there for our grandkids, sometimes we are called to something we didn’t know we were ready for.
Are you working with your grandkids’ parents and other adults in the picture toward a common goal of building up your grandkids?
This should be a celebration of young life uniting with old life, and the strength and stability that comes to families as a result.
These sayings might seem like clichés, but they actually contain real wisdom. And often they stick with us for many years—our grandkids too.
We’re in a great position to be our grandkids’ biggest fans, and it’s all about consistently speaking positive words to them.
While “gramping” might be a new term, the idea isn’t new: dedicated grandparents finding ways to spend time with their grandkids.
As grandparents, we have a lot to contribute to our grandkids’ ideas about what it means to be a man or woman, largely through our example.
As your grandchild experiences various challenges at school and in life, you can be a needed sounding board and encourager.
Jay Payleitner provides a list of 20 things grandparents should NOT do. A little common sense should help you avoid all of these blunders.
Just as our grandkids are always changing, we all need to adapt and find new ways to invest in them and their future.
Insights we gain about our grandkids — their gifts and interests — can lead to a shared activity or connection point with them.