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DC Grandparenting Examiner

5 Reading Month books for grandparents

February 24, 2:53 AMDC Grandparenting ExaminerNancie Meng
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Welcome to Grandparenting
 Grandparenting info from pregnancy and beyond

To borrow a phrase, reading is fundamental, especially in March when Reading Month takes place. As you think about the books you might want to read, let me make five recommendations for you and for your grandchildren. I'll post one review a day.

1.  Welcome to Grandparenting, by Rosemary Weis and Michelle Johnston

My mother was not the stereotypical  grandmother . She didn't knit. She didn't sew. She didn't bake. She sang Beatle songs in the style of  the Bobbi Mohan-Culp character played by Ana Gasteyer (in those Saturday Night Live skits with Will Ferrell). She picked up strangers she met at the grocery store and brought them home to play Bridge. If they didn't know how to play Bridge, she taught them.

Yet my daughters remind me each time they share stories about my mom that she was their grandma. She created important and lasting memories for and with each of them and their cousins.  She enjoyed being Oma more than anything else in her life.

That's the message Rosemary Weis and Michelle Johnston give us in their book Welcome to Grandparenting.  They urge us to enjoy the journey and to remember that  grandparents have opportunities to make a difference "not only in the lives of your grandchildren, but in the lives of your children as well."  They remind us that grandparenting is an important role and that the key to success is to work as a team with our kids for the benefit of our grandchildren. 

Philosophies and lessons about grandparenting are sprinkled among ideas for helping the mom-to-be through the first nine months, ways to help ease the stress of modern day parenting for our children (after all we parented in the "olden days"), and tips for being an active grandparent.   Weis and Johnston packed this tiny book with common sense, tips, and activity ideas (for the nine-months of waiting for your first grandchild's arrival straight through to the transition into great-grandparenting -- banish the thought).

In the end, the book provides important take-aways: 

  • Give of yourself
  • Partner with the parents
  • Think of the children

If you follow that advice, the rest is easy. That's a comforting thought these days.

Whether you are a grandparent-in-waiting or chock full of experience, this book should be part of your library. If you're a parent-to-be, read this book yourself and think about giving it to your parents as a way to announce your joyous news. Why not start off on this wonderful journey together?

 

Book 2:  Who says Grandma can't learn "How to be a Geek Goddess."

 

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