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THE TIES THAT BIND: GRANDMOTHERS SEEN AS BEDROCK OF CARING, NEW NATIONWIDE SURVEY FROM THENANABLOGS.COM AFFIRMS

Nana Occasionally Spoils, Crosses Swords with Parents, Americans

SUMMER SHADE, Kentucky (Dec. 14, 2009) – As extended families gather for the holidays, what do Americans really think of grandma?

Overwhelmingly, they perceive her as caring – and just as overwhelmingly, they reject any characterization of the grandmother/grandchild relationship as “distant.”  At the same time, they acknowledge that nana is prone to spoiling her grandchildren and admit that parents and grandparents don’t always see eye to eye.

Those are the principal findings of a new nationwide survey conducted in late November by TheNanaBlogs (www.thenanablogs.com), the definitive resource for the “Nana Generation.”

In association with Chicago market researcher Synovate, TheNanaBlogs asked 1,000 Americans, a cross-section of the population: ““Which of the following describes a typical grandmother/grandchild relationship?”

Here’s the high-level breakdown among total respondents:

  • Cares deeply about the grandchild  – 81 percent
  • Spoils the grandchild – 56 percent
  • Disagrees with the parent from time to time about child issues – 40 percent
  • Favors one grandchild over another – 8.5 percent
  • Distant from the child – 3 percent
  • None of these – 7 percent

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TheNanaBlogs is a creation of Teresa Bell Kindred, a retired high school history teacher, author, magazine columnist, 53- year-old mom of five and proud nana of one granddaughter (featured in her nanablog, www.NanaHood.com).

While “caring deeply” was the top choice across all age brackets, younger respondents weren’t quite as gung-ho as their elders – in a sense, reflecting a perception gap between grandchildren and grandparents.  Some 87 percent of those 65 and over selected “caring” as their top choice, but just 77 percent of those 18-24 did so – the lowest among all age groups.

Men and women cited “caring” in equal numbers (81 percent) but marital status proved a point of departure: 84 percent of married respondents opted for the “caring” option, against 78 percent of unmarrieds.  Interestingly, among households with children, more households without children referenced “caring” (82 percent) than those with (80.5 percent).

On a regional basis, perceptions of caring were highest in the Midwest (83.5 percent) and lowest in the West (76 percent).  All income groups held at around 83 percent, save those earning less than $25K, at 75 percent – perhaps indicative of a younger population (grandchildren themselves).

“These findings are heartening but they’re also instructive,” Kindred said.  “While our survey affirms that grandmothers and their grandchildren are close emotionally, many don’t see each other as often as they’d like – certainly not as often as nanas would like.  Thankfully, it’s easier than ever for families to communicate via technology… and it’s incumbent upon grandparents to get comfortable with social networks.  That’s where our grandchildren play, and we ought to connect with them every chance we get.”

Caring Taken to Extremes?

If spoiling isn’t exactly caring taken to extremes, it did prove the second most popular perception.  Men were slightly more likely to cite “spoiling” than women (57 percent to 55 percent).  Moving up the age scale, the grandparents’ bracket (65+) was least likely by far to name spoiling (just 49 percent) while the ostensible witnesses to nana’s indulgence (those aged 18-24 and 25-34) referenced it in big numbers — 60.5 percent and 64 percent, respectively.

Does spoiling fill an income gap?  TheNanaBlogs survey revealed wide variation based on employment status: 60 percent of those employed fulltime cited “spoiling,” against 45 percent of part-time workers and 49 percent of retirees.  Those in the middle of the income spectrum referenced spoiling more than those at the top and bottom (60 percent vs. 54 percent).

Among the survey’s other findings:

  • Who’s the Boss? In terms of generational conflict, the study exposed a small gender gap – 38 percent by men, 42 percent by women – and a much wider variation based on age.  Perhaps suggesting that disputes are in the eye of the beholder, those aged 25-34 were least likely to see nanas and parents at odds (31 percent), the sandwich generation most likely (45 percent), and those 65 and over mostly in the middle, at 41.5 percent.  Grandparental conflict appears to be more of an issue in the Midwest (45 percent) and relatively less so in the Northeast (35.5 percent).  Similarly, it’s a bigger concern with whites than nonwhites (42 percent to 32 percent).
  • Playing Favorites. On the matter of “nana likes you best,” the genders split a bit – 10 percent of men agreed, against 7 percent of women.  Once again, age matters: 12 percent of the youngest respondents cited favoritism, versus 6 percent of those 45-54 and 7 percent of those 65 and up.  In a possible allusion to the tribulations of divorce, twice as many of those who aren’t married saw nana doting on one grandkid more than others (12 percent, to 6 percent of marrieds).  That difference applied to nonwhites (13 percent, to 7 percent of whites) and to the unemployed (15 percent — nearly twice the rest of the population).

TheNanaBlogs.com/Synovate survey has a margin of error of +/- 3 percent.  For a full copy of the survey results and a graphic presentation of top-line data, email info@edgecommunicationsinc.com.

About TheNanaBlogs

TheNanaBlogs.com is a new site dedicated to turning nanas, grandmas, memas (and moms) into bloggers.  The site provides them with the space and the technology to begin blogging.  Nanablogs offer grandparents a voice, a place to share thoughts, a place to brag about grandkids – and a new way to connect with family.   Like its sister site, NanaHood.com, TheNanaBlogs.com is a creation of Teresa Bell Kindred.   Teresa is a wife, mom, author, and proud nanablogger.  Sign up now to get started.

Media contact:

Ken Greenberg
Edge Communications, Inc.
818/990-5001
ken@edgecommunicationsinc.com

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GRANDMAS GONE WILD: INTRODUCING theNANABlogs.com,
DEFINITIVE RESOURCE FOR ‘THE NANA GENERATION’

As Grandmothers (and Grandfathers) Join Social Networks – and Take Up Blogging In Record Numbers – Kentucky Nana Offers First Launching Pad for New Bloggers

SUMMER SHADE, Kentucky (Dec. 1, 2009) — If moms and dads can do it, why can’t grandma?

Just in time for the holidays, there’s a new online community created expressly for grandmothers who want to participate in social networking with other grandmothers, as well as blog to stay connected with their families.  Welcome to www.thenanablogs.com, the brainchild of Teresa Bell Kindred, a retired high school history teacher, author, magazine columnist, 53- year-old mom of five and proud nana of one granddaughter (featured in her nanablog,  www.NanaHood.com).

“TheNanaBlogs.com is about making blogging safe – and fun – for grandmothers,” Kindred said. “The NanaHood neighborhood sounds like a place Mr. Rogers might have lived, but it’s actually an online community for grandmothers and moms to log on and learn about technology, social networking, blogging, arts and crafts, scrapbooking, making Barbie doll clothes, health tips, recipes and much, much more.”

The idea for the site came in part from one of Kindred’s magazine columns titled NanaHood: The Second Half of the Motherhood Journey. “I noticed there were lots of quality blogs for moms but sites and blogs for grandmothers were few and far between,” she said.  “At www.thenanablogs.com, moms and grandmas can create a blog at no cost and with zero effort.”  Those who don’t consider themselves tech-savvy can turn to a simple step-by-step tutorial that walks them through the process.  On the premise that all questions are good ones, free email support is available at no extra cost.

According to CNN, there are now about 1.5 million female Facebook members older than 55 — roughly a 550 percent increase within the last six months.  By comparison, membership among people younger than 25 grew by less than 20 percent over the same period, Inside Facebook reports.

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