From Dr. Ken Canfield: Most grandparents are looking for more ways to stay in contact with your grandkids, build them up, and let them know you love them.

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.
From Dr. Ken Canfield: Most grandparents are looking for more ways to stay in contact with your grandkids, build them up, and let them know you love them.
by Grant Goodvin – Stories, traditions and values add richness to family, and it’s likely up to us to pass them down and carry them forward.
From Dr. Ken Canfield: There aren’t too many great things about getting older, but having grandchildren is definitely one of them.
Being a grandparent isn’t always easy. Sometimes we need to look at what was poured into us as we try to pour the right stuff into our grands.
For Mother’s Day, here are tributes to grandmothers. Know that your grandchildren will grow up with similar thoughts and memories about you.
Nana’s House by Teresa Kindred: I know grandmothers who connect with their grandchildren via FaceTime and make the best of it, but it’s very challenging for them.
Sharing your faith with your grands is difficult when you and your adult child don’t share the same commitment to faith.
It’s widely recognized that we grandparents can say things that reach the heart of a grandchild like no one else’s words will.
As the older generation, we should be the ones displaying more maturity than the younger ones. But all too often, it doesn’t seem that way.
Some significant insights about how the pandemic has changed grandparents’ relationships with their grandchildren — from our recent survey on grandparents and the pandemic.
Even though it’s very difficult for us, we need to stay engaged with our children and grandchildren and help them as best we can.
We can endeavor to become sources of stability and comfort through all the ups and downs—like comforting angels in our grandkids’ lives.