Shirley Showalter is an award-winning educator, author, speaker, and grandmother. With a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin, Showalter served as a professor and then president of Goshen College in Indiana and as a foundation executive at the Fetzer Institute in Michigan. She and her husband live in Lititz, Pennsylvania. Marilyn McEntyre is an award-winning spiritual writer, speaker, retreat leader, and professor of medical humanities and American literature. She has written and edited over twenty books and has won several teaching awards. McEntyre currently teaches in programs at New College Berkeley, Western Seminary, the Oblate School of Theology, and Westmont College in San Francisco. She lives in Carmichael, California.
The Mindful Grandparent celebrates the many manifestations of grandparents' love. For Showalter and McEntyre, that love is expressed in each story carefully told and in their thoughtful reflection on what it means to be grandparents in a world beset by challenges. Their book is a gift for all who long to develop close, sacred relationships with their children's children, even if they've yet to be born. --Anabaptist World This is a book I did not know I was waiting for. It is a reflective handbook for becoming a grandparent--perhaps the first ever?--but so much more. A celebration of the flow and fullness of life. A call to the honor and pleasures of eldering. It is a gift to our world which is so in need of--and so ripe for--old ways and new of deep accompaniment and formation across generations. --Krista Tippett, founder and editor-in-chief of The On Being Project, host of On Being program and podcast, and recipient of the National Humanities Medal The Mindful Grandparent is not only warm, loving, and practical; it's also gently honest. The authors know that this three-generation dance between grandparents, their own children, and their grandkids sometimes means that toes get stepped on. But as we learn the steps involved in doing a graceful dance, we see more clearly that this three-generation dance is grace-filled. --Parker J. Palmer, author of On the Brink of Everything, The Courage to Teach, and Let Your Life Speak The Mindful Grandparent is essential reading for longtime grandparents, grandparents-to-be, and anyone else who seeks to give loving, grandparent-style caring to our young. Marilyn McEntyre and Shirley Showalter show us how grandparenting is both an art and a contemplative practice. They offer a roadmap for navigating the many roles grandparents play, as well as the new and diverse challenges facing their grandchildren. --Judith Valente, former PBS faith and values correspondent and author of The Art of Pausing and How to Be This beautifully written book is filled with love but devoid of sentimentality--richly affirming of grandparents while also challenging us to keep growing and learning as we seek to be helpful to today's children and their parents. Here you'll find renewal, inspiration, and genuine help as you respond to a beloved and important calling. --Dorothy C. Bass, author of Stepmother: Redeeming a Disdained Vocation and Receiving the Day: Christian Practices for Opening the Gift of Time This is a book of wisdom, lightly worn, joyfully shared. The scope is generous and fearless, from crafts and games to racism and death. As a pediatrician, I affirm the authors' respectful understanding of children (and parents) and how they flourish. As a grandmother, I treasure what this graceful work teaches me. --Margaret Mohrmann, professor emerita of pediatrics and religious studies at University of Virginia and author of Attending Children The Mindful Grandparent is a warm and delightful invitation to enjoy grandparenting--and to do it well. Chock full of stories, ideas, wisdom, and encouragement, this is a book to keep handy and return to often. --Dora Dueck, award-winning author and grandmother of nine Whether you are already a seasoned grandparent or on the threshold of this chapter of your life, this book will challenge you to awaken to who you are in this moment, and who you can become--which, as the authors say, is 'what grandparenting, and life itself, is all about.' --Marlena Fiol, professor emerita at University of Colorado and author of Nothing Bad Between Us and CALLED