Perfect love sometimes does not come until the first grandchild.
-Welsh Proverb


Now Available

Grandparents:
Wisconsin Style


Available online and in bookstores

Coming Spring 2008

Grandparents:
Illinois Style

Coming Fall 2008

Grandparents:
Michigan Style

 

 

Grandparents Minnesota Style Places to Go & Wisdom to Share -Mike Link & Kate Crowley

Now available for order from Adventure Publications or your favorite bookseller.

Click here for purchase information

Grandparents Minnesota Style

 

 


About the Authors
Essays
Poems
Things to do
Activities by State
Home

This site will be continuously growing and improving based on ideas, essays, letters and advice from its readers. Please feel free to contribute your own grandparenting wisdom, stories, activities and lessons to us at any time!

Mike Link and Kate Crowley are grandparents of three young boys and a little girl- Matthew, born September 3, 2003 and Aren and Ryan, twins born August 14, 2004 and Annelise, born May 10, 2007. This is not how we would have expected to introduce ourselves a few years ago, but that is the magic of grandparenting. It is not what you plan, but rather what happens to you. Read more about Mike & Kate

The Joy of Grandparenting

“Where are you dad?”

“We got a late start and have about an hour till we get to you, why?”

“Well you better hurry. Your grandson heard Gampa was coming and now we are sitting out on the curb waiting for you to arrive.” An hour later we found our greeting party on the curb, on the blanket.

Who could ask for a better welcome than that? That’s the love our grandchildren have for us if we are willing to involve ourselves in their lives; the reason we want to create special memories with our grandchildren. Our greatest gift to them is our love and attention. They are the greatest gift we could receive.

In an age when “Soccer Mom” and “Soccer Dad” are used as normal terms to describe parenting, we know we are in a confusion of roles and relationships. Often parents are scheduling rather than parenting; channeling rather than nurturing. Our society has enabled some parents to allow others to “coach” their children into maturity. This may not be the parent’s choice, but in the driven world we have created, the demands to make a living are great. But do not despair; there is a solution that is ancient in its lineage. As an editorial in the Washington Post by Abigail Trafford describes the plight of today’s families, she refers to the next two decades as the transition from baby boomers to grand baby boomers.

As our society becomes more world mixed and other cultures come to be more prominent, will we hope that we will relearn the lessons of extended families. Good parenting actually means extending the safety net of experiences, support, love, learning, and connection through extended roles of grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins as found in the traditional cultures throughout the world.

On this website we hope to explore the role and the pleasures of grandparenting. Join us in discussions, check out the places to go, read essays on grandparenting, and share your thoughts.

 

 

Grandparents Minnesota Style