The Five Mistakes That Burn Bridges
1. Undermining Parental Rules
“Oh, a little extra screen time won’t hurt.” “Don’t tell your mom, but here’s some candy before dinner.” “Your parents are too strict – you can stay up late at Grandma’s house.”
These seem like harmless indulgences, but they send a dangerous message: parents’ rules don’t matter, and grandparents know better. When parents discover this (and they will), they pull back. They limit visits, supervise interactions more closely, or cut contact entirely.
The fix: Ask parents what rules matter most to them, then honor those rules – even if you think they’re unnecessary. Save special treats for occasions when parents approve, and never ask grandchildren to keep secrets from their parents.
2. Offering Unsolicited Parenting Advice
“When I raised my kids, we never did it that way.” “Have you tried…?” “You’re being too hard on them.” “You’re too lenient.”
Even well-intentioned advice can feel like criticism, especially when parents are exhausted, overwhelmed, or second-guessing themselves. Unless they explicitly ask for your input, assume they don’t want it.
The fix: Wait to be asked. When you do offer advice, frame it as your experience, not universal truth: “What worked for me was… but every child is different.” And always validate their approach first: “You’re doing a great job. Parenting is hard.”
3. Competing for the Grandchild’s Affection
“I’m the fun one – your parents are the strict ones.” Lavish gifts that parents can’t afford. Constantly comparing yourself favorably to the other grandparents. Making grandchildren feel guilty for spending time with anyone else.
This creates loyalty conflicts that hurt everyone, especially the child caught in the middle.
The fix: Celebrate the child’s other relationships. Speak positively about their parents and other grandparents. Your role isn’t to be the favorite – it’s to be a consistent, loving presence.
4. Overstepping Boundaries
Showing up unannounced. Making plans with grandchildren without checking with parents first. Posting photos on social media without permission. Giving major gifts (pets, electronics) without approval.
Even if your intentions are pure, overstepping signals disrespect for parents’ authority and preferences.
The fix: Always ask first. “Is it okay if I stop by Saturday?” “Can I take Emma to the park this weekend?” “Do you mind if I share this photo?” Respect “no” without resentment.
5. Taking Sides in Family Conflicts
When parents argue or divorce, grandparents sometimes align with one parent against the other – or worse, bad-mouth a parent to the grandchildren. This puts children in impossible positions and damages your credibility with everyone.
The fix: Stay neutral. Support both parents (when possible) and never criticize one parent to the grandchildren. Your role is to be a stable, non-judgmental presence during chaos.