The Biggest Mistake Grandparents Make - And the Question That Changes Everything

By Neil Taft

I didn’t expect a podcast interview to change the direction of my life’s work.

But that’s exactly what happened when I sat down with The Rebel Rootz Show and said something I had believed for years – something I had lived – but had never quite said out loud in those exact words.

The host asked me what I thought was the biggest mistake grandparents make.

I didn’t hesitate.

“The biggest mistake grandparents make is forgetting to take care of their grandchildren’s mother.”

Then I said this:

“The daughter or daughter-in-law is the queen on the throne. She decides whether you get access to your grandchildren. Respect her, value her, and never take sides in a conflict.”

I had no idea what was about to happen next.

1.9 Million Views. And a Comment Section That Stopped Me Cold.

A segment of that interview was posted on TikTok. Within days it had reached 1.9 million views – 220,700 likes and 2,044 comments from grandparents, mothers, daughters-in-law, and adult children all over the world. On Instagram, another 64,000 people liked it and 925 left comments.

I read them all.

The comments stopped me cold. Not because of the volume, but because of the emotion behind them.

Grandmothers writing: “I wish someone had told me this 20 years ago.”

Daughters-in-law writing: “Please send this to my mother-in-law.”

Adult children writing: This is exactly what destroyed our family.”

And grandparents – heartbroken grandparents – writing: “I lost access to my grandchildren and I never understood why until right now.”

That response told me something important: this wasn’t a niche insight for a small audience. This was a wound that millions of families were carrying quietly. And nobody was talking about it directly enough.

Why Grandparent Estrangement Happens

Here’s what I’ve learned after 80+ years of family life, 4 books, and nearly 500 published articles on grandparenting:

Most grandparents don’t lose access to their grandchildren because they did something dramatically wrong. They lose access because of a thousand small moments where they forgot who was steering the ship.

They offered advice without being asked. They quietly undermined a parenting decision. They took their adult child’s side in a conflict with their partner. They showed up with love for the grandchildren but not enough love – or respect – for the person raising them.

Grandparent estrangement rarely announces itself. It creeps in through unspoken resentment, ignored boundaries, and good intentions delivered the wrong way. By the time most grandparents realize what’s happening, the distance has already grown.

The mother of your grandchildren is not an obstacle between you and your grandchildren. She is the bridge. And if you don’t tend that bridge, it will close.

The Question Nobody Is Asking

After the response came pouring in, I went back to my desk and started writing. Not just an article – a book.

Because what I realized is that the relationship between grandparents and their grandchildren’s parents is the most underexplored, most consequential relationship in the entire grandparenting conversation. Every book, every article, every workshop focuses on the grandparent-grandchild bond. Almost nothing focuses on the relationship that makes that bond possible.

The question at the center of my upcoming book is one most grandparents were never taught to ask:

What do their parents actually want from me?

Not what we assume they want. Not what we think they should want. Not what worked in our generation. What do the parents of our grandchildren – the people steering the ship – actually need from us right now?

Grandparents who ask that question – and genuinely listen to the answer – are the ones who never lose access. They are the ones who get called first. They are the ones whose grandchildren grow up knowing them, loving them, and carrying their wisdom forward.

What You Can Do Right Now

If you want to tend that relationship starting today, here are three moves that work:

  • Ask what supports their parenting priorities – sleep routines, screen time, food, discipline – and keep your agreements, especially the small ones. Nothing builds trust faster than consistency in the quiet moments.

  • When Mom is doing something well, say so out loud – sometimes in front of the kids. Public affirmation is one of the most underused tools a grandparent has.

  • When you miss the mark, name the impact rather than defending your intention. “I can see that landed wrong. I’m sorry” goes further than any explanation of what you meant.

What’s Coming

The Bridge To Your Grandchildren: What Their Parents Want You To Know is built for grandparents who want to stay in the room – not just physically, but in the lives, memories, and futures of their grandchildren.

More details are coming soon. In the meantime, if today’s post resonated, I’d love to hear your story.

Connect with Neil

For more on preventing grandparent estrangement and building lasting family connections, explore the full resource library at caringgrandparents.com.