How to Tell Your Children About Their Grandparents
Children often never get to meet their great-grandparents. Helping them come to know their ancestors means giving them roots.
Stories instead of lectures
Tell vivid moments: how grandfather repaired the boat, how grandmother baked pies. Stories are remembered far better than abstract words like "he was a good man."
Show the face and the voice
Photographs and voice recordings make ancestors real. A child doesn't just hear a name — they see and hear a person.
Make it a shared thing
Let the child ask questions and add their own touches to the memory page. That way getting to know their ancestors becomes a warm, shared endeavor.
Weave it into daily life
Don't turn getting to know ancestors into a "lesson" — recall them naturally: over grandmother's signature dish, by the photo on the shelf, at a family holiday. Small mentions, day after day, take root better than rare big conversations. That way ancestors become part of the child's own family, rather than distant names.
- Vivid stories instead of lectures.
- Show the face and let them hear the voice.
- Make getting to know them a shared thing.
- Weave the memory into everyday life.
Frequently asked questions
Save the story while it is with you
Create a memorial page in a few minutes — gently, beautifully and with respect for your loved ones. Free forever for the text version.
Create a memorial