Anonymous wrote:I wish there was a way to match people who would like to be grandparents with children who don’t have any local grandparents who actively engage with them. My SIL has parents who aren’t very interested in her kids and neither are her in-laws. She’s sad that her kids have 4 living grandparents, but none who want to get to know their grandchildren.
Anonymous wrote:I get it, OP. It sounds like you created a lovely family life when your kids were younger. It may be that they'll come back to that as they grow older. For now, it sounds like you will need to forge your own way.
I am planning for my life to be as you described - kids are too busy, no grandkids, no extended family. I'm really hoping to still have my DH but life is unpredictable. We are planning to live overseas for six months out of the year. If I lose him, I'll have to do a reset. I should probably start thinking about that now.
Anonymous wrote:No other plans? Are you interested in learning a craft or art? If knitting isn’t your style, you can learn to weave, or spin and dye wool. You can take up pottery. you can learn how to blow glass. You can learn how to make stained glass windows. Or garden. Growing veggies not your thing? Create a pollinator garden or herb garden. Volunteer at a local elementary school and do one on one reading. Find a faith community and become involved there. If you like walking and hiking, join the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club and help keep up the lean to sans trails. Learn how to arrange flowers. Learn how to make pastry from scratch. take a sushi class. Take a woodworking class and learn to build small pieces of furniture. Volunteer at a food pantry or soup kitchen. Learn to sew. Learn how to change the oil in your car. Travel. Planning, anticipating, going and remembering. Learn a foreign language and participate ina weekly conversation group. Exercise two hours a day. Bake from scratch. Learn how to make really really good homemade pasta or hummus or roasted veggies. Join a card and games group. Learn how to play bridge. Join an advocacy group and advocate for a cause you feel deeply about. Plan a girls weekend with friends-a few times a year. Most people don’t want to do the planning, but want to participate. Adopt a family the area that does not have grandparents - or become a big sister. Start a book club for the books that you like. Buy tickets to the Nationals, or a series from the Folger theatre, the Kennedy Center or Signature theater....Anonymous wrote:What, besides grandchildren, were in your plans?
A large family, with grandchildren, were in our plans. My friends and cousins spend 2 or more days a week helping out with grandchild logistics, events, etc. Holidays and birthdays with all, trips, etc. In fact, this is everyone. The grandchildren are growing up among their cousins, aunts, uncles, in a large family group, with close relationships.
If you don’t want to become an expert. do a little of everything-one or two at a time.
Anonymous wrote:I wish there was a way to match people who would like to be grandparents with children who don’t have any local grandparents who actively engage with them. My SIL has parents who aren’t very interested in her kids and neither are her in-laws. She’s sad that her kids have 4 living grandparents, but none who want to get to know their grandchildren.

Anonymous wrote:What, besides grandchildren, were in your plans?
A large family, with grandchildren, were in our plans. My friends and cousins spend 2 or more days a week helping out with grandchild logistics, events, etc. Holidays and birthdays with all, trips, etc. In fact, this is everyone. The grandchildren are growing up among their cousins, aunts, uncles, in a large family group, with close relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, despite a lot of assumptions about what we would be doing in our 60s and+, we will not be doing any of that. No grandchildren, kids are also living and doing other things in a variety of places in other areas. Yes, I know that's OK. Yes, I know they don't owe us grandchildren.
We are all about family...lots of intergenerational family action while we raised our kids, our siblings, their kids, extended family- cousins, grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends who are family. Big dinners, summer trips at the beach. Everyone is gone. Parents are gone. Cousins are involved with their grandchildren in other cities, siblings moved away to be with their children and grandchildren. It feels so empty. And so suddenly- in a lot of ways.
Of course we have friends. They also have their own families which are growing exponentially.
If you needed to redesign what's next, what did you do? Did you move, travel (we will travel a bit, but not obsessively), start a new career? Did you find friends will similar circumstances?