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Becoming a Grandmother: 6 Things New Grannies Are Concerned About

By Ann Richardson November 02, 2025 Family

So, you have become a grandmother! Congratulations!

How are you feeling about it? Excited? Apprehensive? Not ready to see yourself as a grandma? Join the club. Many of us feel that way at first.

Just after my second grandson was born, I decided to write a book exploring how women feel about being a grandmother, based on interviews I conducted with grandmothers from a range of backgrounds.

It seemed such a complex subject, with so much to talk about. I had already written other books of this kind, so it was just taking a slightly new path.

In the course of writing it, I learned a lot about how grandmothers of all shapes and sizes feel when a brand-new person enters the family. The book is full of quotations, and I’ve decided to share a few of them with you.

However, I should note that the women interviewed were very open and honest – in some cases exploring painful difficulties within their own family – and were promised anonymity. In consequence, they are not named.

The Baby

The main thing grandmothers think about is the baby, of course. Will he or she be OK? Is he or she healthy? And then there is your response to the baby. You may be more excited than you ever imagined:

“It really is like falling in love. You’ve got this all-encompassing, must-protect-at-all-costs feeling – a glow. It’s wonderful. You’ve got to do everything you possibly can to make sure that nothing ever, ever happens to this person.”

Some feel an important bond:

“There’s an immediate kind of recognition – it’s a look in the eye, it’s a feeling of ‘you and I understand each other’. I can’t explain it, but there’s definitely a bond with a new baby.”

The Baby’s Parents

With a new baby in the family, everyone focuses on the baby, but you are the mother of one of the parents, and you can’t help but wonder how they will cope.

This can lead to a lot of worrying:

“I got too involved at first. I used to worry are they doing the right thing? Are they getting up in the night? Are they doing it all different to how I’d done it? – I was almost in a panic. It was their way, not my way, and I found that quite difficult.”

And this also leads to the difficult issue of proffering advice:

“Every grandmother has to be issued with a zip. There’s a fine line between help and interference, and you have to learn it. Nobody can teach it to you, because everybody’s experience is different.”

Your Role in Childcare

Maybe you never thought about your involvement in all this before, but you will be confronted with an important question: how much childcare do you want to do? Perhaps your daughter is going back to work and needs your help. Or it would be helpful for her to have a day off.

But what do you want to do? Just the occasional day or evening babysit – or something more. Some grandparents are keen to be involved, but not everyone is:

“When the first one was born, I said, ‘I’m not a babysitting grandmother.’ Which meant that I didn’t want to say that every Thursday I could be a babysitting grandmother. I couldn’t, because I was still earning a living. Of course, I did look after them at times or in the evening.”

The Whole Family

A new grandchild affects not only the parents, but the whole family. Your husband becomes a grandfather. Your other children become aunts and uncles, your parents – if they are still alive – become great-grandparents. It casts a wide net:

“You see all the family strands playing through. It’s like a form of weaving, the fabric of families coming together, and you start to write another story together – I find that so moving. Suddenly we’re making this new fabric.”

Yourself

But don’t forget about yourself. Oh my goodness, you have a new role in life and a new title! It is quite shocking, because it makes you think of your own grandmother, as seen through your childish eyes – and she was old! You’re not old, of course, just mature.

Perhaps you have a problem with the image:

“My first reaction when I heard I was going to be a grandmother was, oh God, that’s not very sexy. I was in my fifties and I was having a relationship with someone who said he’d never been to bed with a grandmother. I just told him he could have a new experience…”

But it does make you stop and think about who you are and your future:

“Becoming a grandmother makes you question the fragility of life. You feel you are moving up, passing on. You wonder how long you have to live. There’s another generation that has come up – and you belong to the one who would have to leave to make room. I’m not eternal. I’d just like to see what’s going to happen.”

The Longer Term

There is nothing like a new generation to set the mind wandering. What will the world be like when this baby is grown-up? How will he or she affect everyone involved? What is it all about?

“Khalil Gibran said children are the arrows – you’ve got the bow and the parent shoots the arrow, but they’re no longer yours. They have to live their own lives. Grandparenting is a bit like that. You have to help them as the springboard to start them off and hope that they will live well, that they will care about themselves and about other people.”

And this is just a few of the issues that new grandparents think about.

Welcome to a new adventure.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What does grandparenting mean to you? Are you a new grandparent? Do you recognise these issues as matters you think about? Do you have other concerns? Please share them so we can chat about them below.

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Timothy_warren

Hello , As a new grandparent I find myself worrying about the safety of my granddaughter, she is 1 year old , I constantly look for dangers in my daughter’s house, is this a common issue ?

Ann Richardson

I have no idea, Timothy, what other people’s reactions are, but I am much more aware of dangers to my grandchildren than I was to those to my children. I would advise you to stop worrying as much as you can – it will be better for you and better for your granddaughter!

lauren

Nice Article – I have been a grandma (grammy) for 5 years now. It is a JOY. While my daughter lives 1 mile away and now has 5 year old and 2 year old, I enjoy being close enough to stop in and read a story before bed or just say hi and grab a hug. Since my parents were 70 miles away, my kids missed out on having grandparents being more involved. I still work during the week but I am able to help pick up occasionally. I’ve told my daughter that I have no interest in being “the daycare provider” once I retire. My son who lives across the country just had his first child and while I have video calls and flew out there and they are coming here for holidays, it’s not the same but we will make it work and I will enjoy each moment. Once I retire, I hope to spend more time with my son’s new family. I think being a grandparent is the greatest Joy!

Ann Richardson

Thank you. Sounds like you have things well sorted.

Maureen

This was actually difficult to read for me. I don’t feel any of this at all. I had a traumatic parenthood and was hoping none of my kids would have children. I just don’t want to go through any of it again. It’s awful. I have 3 grandkids near me and 4 in another state. It is NOT what everyone says about “love at first sight” etc. For me, it is dread. Just the sound of a baby crying puts me in a tail spin. 10 years of therapy and still working on it.

Marilyn Macdonald

Reading this article comes at a great time for me. My daughter’s son is 6 months old and I am a Nana for the first time. This little guy certainly has my whole heart and then some. My husband and I are very fortunate to be living in the same house as my daughter. However it does come with some trials. We need to tread softly. We are the grandparents not the parents. We are honoured to have this opportunity in our 70’s

The Author

Ann Richardson’s most popular book, The Granny Who Stands on Her Head, offers a series of reflections on growing older. Subscribe to her free Substack newsletter, where she writes fortnightly on any subject that captures her imagination. Ann lives in London, England with her husband of sixty years. Please visit her website for information on all her books: http://annrichardson.co.uk.

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