This image is the cover for the book Where Two Worlds Meet

Where Two Worlds Meet


When grandchildren are young, a sweet treat or new toy is enough to inspire their unconditional adoration. And then your grandchildren grow up. Suddenly they are teenagers and it's not so easy.

With our differences in musical tastes, technology, formative events . . . one could say we are from different worlds.

Where Two Worlds Meet starts with the teenage years, recognizing that your grandchildren are becoming independent beings. It's an action-focused guide to stay connected and even deepen your relationship with your grandchildren as you both age.

Parents will love this book too, as it helps grandparents respect boundaries as the grandparent, not the parent, and teaches how to develop healthy interdependence. All these ideas work whether you are in the same city or connecting from afar.

Each chapter includes hands-on tactics to put learning into action. It's peppered with letters from grandchildren of diverse ages and backgrounds, sharing personal stories about a grandparent's impact on their lives.

Grandparents can have a transformative effect on their family when they unleash their creativity, share their skills, and give voice to the things they are passionate about. Creativity is about bringing your whole self, including your vulnerability, to the relationship with your grandchildren as you enter each other's world.

Jerry Witovsky, Deanna Shoss

Jerry Witkovsky (MSW, University of Illinois) is a beloved mentor to thousands of individuals and generations of families, thanks to 47 years of professional leadership, eighteen of them as General Director of the Jewish Community Centers of Chicago. Since his 1997 retirement, Jerry has focused his considerable energies on grandparenting facilitation---helping multigenerational families work (and play) together to create a rich family life. Jerry believes that grandparents, when they share their creativity, commitment, and things about which they are passionate, can transform their families. He's made it his mission to get that message out to as many grandparents as possible. He has spearheaded a growing number of school-based programs designed to strengthen connections between grandparents and their teenaged grandchildren and strengthen school communities. He turned that program into an online curriculum called The Grandparent-Grandchild Connection School Program. He writes the Legacy Column for Grand Magazine, the publication for grandparents. He's a regular speaker for grandparents in The Jewish Agency for Israel's Global Intergenerational Initiative (G2) on "How to enter your grandchildren's world." Most recently, Jerry partnered with JCC Chicago to launch "Grandparents Write Your Stories." Jerry wants to remove barriers for grandparents to enjoy every possible opportunity to help their families, watch them thrive, and to deeply appreciate each other as individuals. "Always leave your campsite better than you found it," is Jerry's motto for life. One, because camp is in his blood, starting from when he created a day camp for children of US Military personnel while stationed in Japan after WWII, to becoming a Boys Club camp counselor and ultimately director of JCC Chicago's Camp Chi. Jerry believes each of us has an obligation to leave the world, our communities, our families, better for having been a part of it. For grandparents, that starts with unleashing their full potential, drawing on their creativity and things about which they are passionate, to have a deeply meaningful relationship across lifespan with their grandchildren and adult children. Learn more at www.grandparentsunleashed.com

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