If you’re a grandparent, you are more than a keeper of memories. You are a builder of moments. A guide. A model for what living fully can look like at any age.
Your grandchildren are watching you, whether you realize it
or not.
They’re not just learning from what you say. They’re
learning from how you live.
And here’s the truth: they don’t need you to be perfect.
They don’t need you to have all the answers. What they need is to see that life
doesn’t stop being creative, curious, or meaningful just because we get older.
They need to see that the spark is still there.
I was sitting in my backyard not long ago, on one of those
warmer afternoons when the air feels soft and time seems to slow down. I found
myself watching the clouds drift across the sky. Not just looking, but really
watching.
And I realized something.
Clouds are never just clouds.
They stretch, twist and reshape themselves constantly. One
moment, they’re a flock of sheep moving across the sky. The next, they’re a
mountain range, or a face, or something you can’t quite name but still feel.
They are always changing, always creating something new.
I can see the mountains from where I sit. Solid, steady,
unmoving, or so it seems. But even they change, depending on the light, the
mist, the clouds that wrap themselves around the peaks. On some days, the
mountains feel sharp and clear. On others, they soften into something almost
dreamlike.
When I was younger, I didn’t need to be reminded to notice
these things.
Imagination came naturally.
The coastline wasn’t just a line separating land and water; it
was a puzzle, a maze, something to explore. The bark on a tree wasn’t just
texture; it was a pattern, a story waiting to be traced. Even lightning during
a storm wasn’t frightening; it was alive, dancing across the sky, full of
energy and meaning.
Children understand this instinctively.
They know that imagination brings the world to life.
But somewhere along the way, many of us set that aside. We
became practical. Responsible. Focused on doing what needed to be done. And
there’s nothing wrong with that; we built lives, after all. We raised families.
We contributed.
But now, in this stage of life, we have something many
people don’t.
Time.
And with that time comes a choice.
We can let the days pass, or we can reawaken that spark.
Not in some grand, complicated way. But in small, meaningful
moments.
Sit outside and really look at the sky.
Play a song and let it carry you.
Tell a story, not perfectly, but honestly.
Pick up a pencil, a camera, and a notebook.
Ask a grandchild, “What do you see?” and then share what you
see.
That’s where creativity begins again.
And when your grandchildren see you doing that, when they
see you curious, engaged, open to wonder, they learn something powerful. They
learn that life doesn’t narrow with age. It expands, if we let it.
They learn that imagination isn’t just for the young.
They learn that growing older doesn’t mean fading away; it
means deepening.
So yes, we hold onto the photos when we can find them. We
listen to the songs that take us back. We honour the memories that shaped us.
But we don’t stop there.
We create new ones.
Because in the end, it’s not just about how clearly we can
look back.
It’s about how fully we choose to live forward, right here,
right now, with the people who matter most, and the moments that are waiting to
be noticed.