Grandparents strengthen family bonds by showing up consistently, honoring the parents first, building shared rituals, transmitting values through stories, and staying present through the hard seasons. Connection across generations is not accidental – it is intentional, and it starts with a decision.
Here is the practical framework Neil has developed across 80+ years of lived family experience.
The single most powerful thing a grandparent can do is show up – not perfectly, but consistently.
Grandchildren do not remember the gifts. They remember the grandparent who came to the recital, who answered the phone, who sat beside them without needing to fix anything. Presence communicates value in a way that words alone never can.
A few months ago, Neil had lunch with his granddaughter – the one he used to give upside-down hugs to when she was small. She was telling her now-husband and mother-in-law how that ritual had been part of growing up. Moments like these become the memories that last for decades.
What to do:
Every strong family has rituals – small, repeated actions that say “this is who we are.” Rituals create belonging, and belonging strengthens bonds.
Neil’s signature ritual is the upside-down hug – a tradition that started as a way to make his grandchildren laugh and became something passed down through generations. It costs nothing. It takes seconds. And it is unmistakably theirs.
Your ritual does not have to be elaborate. It has to be yours.
What to do:
The world your grandchildren are growing up in looks nothing like the one you navigated. That gap can become a wall – or it can become a bridge. Curiosity is what builds the bridge.
Ask questions about their world without judgment. Learn the games they play, the music they listen to, the pressures they face. You do not have to understand everything. You just have to be genuinely interested.
This is also where values transmission happens most naturally – not through lectures, but through conversations where grandchildren feel safe enough to ask the hard questions and trust they will get an honest answer.
What to do:
The grandparent-grandchild relationship does not exist in isolation. It runs through the parents. Grandparents who build the strongest bonds with their grandchildren almost always have one thing in common: they respect and support the parents first.
This is the most overlooked principle in grandparenting. When grandparents undermine parental authority – even with good intentions – it creates tension that ultimately damages the grandparent-grandchild relationship too.
Honor the parents. Win the grandchildren.
What to do:
Grandparents carry something no one else in a child’s life can offer: the long view. You have lived through things your grandchildren have not faced yet. Your stories – of failure, resilience, faith, and reinvention – are among the most powerful tools you have.
But stories only work when they are shared, not preached.
What to do:
For grandparents of faith, the role goes beyond presence – it is about transmission. You are often the living link between a grandchild and a heritage that goes back generations.
The values you model, the faith you live out quietly and consistently, the way you treat people when no one is watching – these land in grandchildren in ways that formal instruction never can. You do not have to preach. You have to live it, and tell the stories behind it.
Neil is one of the few grandparenting voices in the United States who speaks specifically to faith-based grandparenting – helping Christian grandparents pass on their beliefs and values in ways that strengthen rather than strain family relationships.
What to do:
Read the Faith-Based Grandparenting Guide
Family bonds are not tested in the easy seasons. They are forged in the hard ones – estrangement, conflict, distance, loss. The grandparents who maintain bonds through difficulty are the ones grandchildren remember for life.
Staying present through hard seasons does not mean forcing connection. It means remaining available. Keeping the door open. Sending the birthday card even when you have not heard back. Showing up quietly, without demand, until the relationship finds its footing again.
What to do:
Every strategy in this framework rests on one foundation: intention. Connection does not happen by accident. It is chosen, repeated, and protected.
Neil Taft has spent decades helping grandparents understand that they are not passive figures in their grandchildren’s lives. They are architects of family culture – people with the unique power to bridge generations, transmit values, and build bonds that outlast them.
The grandchildren who thrive are often the ones with a grandparent who decided to show up with purpose.
That decision starts today.
Neil Taft is a grandparenting expert, author of four books, and TEDx speaker based in Leland, North Carolina. With 80+ years of lived experience across four generations of family life and nearly 500 published articles on intergenerational relationships, Neil is one of the most recognized voices on intentional grandparenting and family legacy in the United States. His message has reached over 2 million people worldwide.
Learn More About Neil | Explore Neil’s Books | Book Neil to Speak | Back to Resources

Neil Taft is a grandparenting expert, author of four books, and TEDx speaker based in Leland, North Carolina. With 80+ years of lived experience across four generations of family life and nearly 500 published articles on intergenerational relationships, Neil is one of the most recognized voices on intentional grandparenting and family legacy in the United States. His message has reached over 2 million people worldwide.
Learn More About Neil | Explore Neil’s Books | Book Neil to Speak | Back to Resources