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My family lives nearly 2,000 miles away from my mom, but my kids are still close to their grandma

January 10, 2026
in News
My family lives nearly 2,000 miles away from my mom, but my kids are still close to their grandma
The author's daughters reading with their grandmother on the Readeo app.
The author’s family lives almost 2,000 miles from his mother, but his daughters stay close with her through regular FaceTime calls and reading together through the Readeo app. Courtesy of Brendan Knapp
  • My kids live across the country from their only living grandmother.
  • We’ve found ways to make the distance feel smaller.
  • They have video calls, regularly set times to read together, and we visit when we can.

Living near your kids’ grandparents is great. The pop-ins for bedtime stories. Help with the school pick-ups and drop-offs. And your go-to phone call when your babysitter is sick one hour before your anniversary reservation.

It’s the best, isn’t it? I wouldn’t know.

My mom lives in Haslett, Michigan — 1,891 miles away from our home in Portland, Oregon. She’s the only living grandmother to my two daughters, 6 and 8, and their only grandfather is close, but at 85, his mobility is limited. There are no pop-ins, drop-offs, or backups, and they lose out on that daily, in-person bonding with her.

Many other families are in the same situation. A study by Cornell researchers found that about one in seven children lives 500 miles or more from their grandparents. Despite the distance, we’ve found ways to bridge the gap, making it feel like Grandma is always near.

There are challenges to living far from Grandma

The distance means Grandma misses all the fun firsts. She’s missed first steps, first words, and first days of school. And it’s not just big moments. When she’s back in town, they suddenly know how to do things like brush their own hair, tie shoelaces, and buckle seatbelts. She missed those little wins, too.

It’s also harder to pass down family traditions and history, though we’ve still found a way to give our kids a sense of belonging. Grandma’s great-aunt’s German ‘city chicken’ recipe, which is breaded veal or pork on a stick (it’s good, I swear!), tells my kids where they come from. The bedtime lullaby she learned from her own grandmother shows nurturing runs in the family. The black-and-white picture on Grandma’s shelf, filled with “people who look like me,” as my daughters say, lets them know they’re not alone in this world.

The author's daughters with his mom in Oregon in 2022.
The author’s family lives almost 2,000 miles from his mother, but his daughters are still close with their grandmother. Courtesy of Brendan Knapp

We’ve worked hard to make it feel like she lives next door

We have a couple of rituals that help us stay connected in between visits. When our daughters were babies and toddlers, Grandma would chat from a screen while they splashed around during baths. She’d talk about her day, ask about theirs, and tell stories. My girls would get so excited to hang out with Grandma. As soon as I’d tell them, “Grandma’s calling,” they’d run for the tub.

Every Sunday, for several years now, she reads to my girls for an hour through an app called Readeo. It features hundreds of books that they can navigate together, and they can see each other on the video screen. And once they started learning to read, she got to fill me in on some of their firsts.

Our in-person visits mean even more these days

There are several non-stop flights from Detroit to Portland, which allow Grandma to attend ballet recitals, spend Christmas mornings with us, and go with us to the Oregon coast. She comes our way twice a year, and we head her way once a year.

When we visit her, it’s special. My girls love to stay at her home. They snuggle under blankets that smell like her, ask about where her art comes from, and fall into her routine. Waking up is an intimate pocket of time they share before my wife and I are awake.

The author's kids at Disney World with their grandma in 2024
The author’s kids make the most of their time with their grandmother. Courtesy of Brendan Knapp

That’s the silver lining of living so far away. When we come together, we make the most of the moments we do have — whether it’s big holiday gatherings, small family dinners, or just having breakfast in our PJs.

We may not have the pop-ins, drop-offs, or backups, but my daughters’ relationship with their grandma is still remarkably close, even from almost 2,000 miles away.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post My family lives nearly 2,000 miles away from my mom, but my kids are still close to their grandma appeared first on Business Insider.

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