Why My Grandkids Didn't Want to Come Over Anymore — And How I Got Them Excited to Visit Again

By Barbara Henderson, Grandmother & Former Elementary School Teacher - Nov 2025

"Am I a boring grandma?"


I kept asking myself that question more and more.


Every Friday, Jake (7) and Emma (4) come over. My daughter has to work, and I watch them.


I used to look forward to it. But lately... I felt like I couldn't keep up anymore.


"Grandma, can we play tag?" Jake called out the moment he walked through the door.


We headed out to the backyard. I ran with them. But after ten minutes, I felt my knees. My back. I had to take a break.


"Grandma, you're done already?" he said, disappointed.


Inside, Emma wanted to build a fort. We'd done it a few times before — blankets, pillows, chairs. But crouching in that tight space, bending down, sitting in there with them? I just can't anymore.


Twenty minutes later, they were both sitting there, bored.


Jake sighed. Emma looked at me with those big eyes.


Maybe I really have become boring to them. I just can't keep up like I used to.


I stood there, helpless. What was I supposed to do with them? I couldn't think of anything.


So I reached for the tablet.


"Just half an hour," I said — more to myself than to them.


They took it without hesitation.


But inside, that guilt was gnawing at me. I just couldn't keep up anymore. And the tablet? That had become my only solution.

 

What "Just 30 Minutes on the Tablet" Actually Does to Kids' Brains — And Why I Had to Stop

A few weeks later, I was talking to my friend Linda about all this. She's a retired pediatrician.


I told her about the exhaustion, the tablets, that feeling like I couldn't really reach the kids anymore.


Her response hit hard: "Barbara, the research is clear. Too much screen time damages development — attention problems, sleep issues, emotional regulation. You need an alternative."


"They're calling it 'brain rot' now in the research (https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11939997/). Sounds harsh, but that's exactly what happens when kids just passively consume."


According to the American Academy of Pediatrics: max 30 minutes a day for kids ages 3 to 6 (https://www.healthychildren.org/English/family-life/Media/Pages/Where-We-Stand-TV-Viewing-Time.aspx).


A 2024 study in JAMA Pediatrics showed: kids with excessive screen time have measurably worse attention spans (https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2808593).


Linda put her hand on mine: "Here's the problem: tablets deliver instant reward — with zero effort. Of course the brain prefers that."


"You need to get them actively engaged. Little missions. Like a scavenger hunt — one task, one goal, maybe a small reward. Kids need that."

The Real Problem: I'm Not 37 Anymore

I just can't keep up.

 

When my own kids were little, I could run around with them for hours. Soccer. Hide and seek. Tag in the backyard. But now? At 63? Five minutes in and my knees are screaming. Every time I bend down, I feel it in my back. And when Jake shouts "Grandma, come on, let's play tag!" — I already know. A few minutes and I'm done.

 

My body just doesn't cooperate anymore.

 

And the kids notice.

 

"Grandma's tired," Emma says. Jake rolls his eyes.

 

Then they're back on the couch. Staring at the tablet.

 

And here's the other thing: Jake (7) and Emma (4) never want to play the same thing.

 

If I find something for Jake — "That's way too hard for Emma!"

 

If I suggest something for Emma — "Grandma, that's for babies!"

 

Puzzles? Jake was bored. Emma got frustrated.

 

Board games? Jake won instantly. Emma cried.

The Random Encounter That Changed Everything

A few days later, I took Jake and Emma to the playground.

 

Same as always: I sat on the bench. Jake swung halfheartedly. Emma played in the sand without much interest.

 

And then I noticed something interesting.

 

Another grandmother was sitting on a bench a few yards away. Her two grandkids — maybe 4 and 7.

 

But these kids were completely different.

 

They were jumping around her excitedly, like she'd just discovered buried treasure.

She was holding some cards in her hand.

 

She pulled one out, read it aloud — and instantly, the kids took off running. Squealing with excitement.

 

Less than thirty seconds later, the little one came back, proudly holding up a leaf. The grandmother gave her a high-five like she'd just done something incredible.

 

I was fascinated.

After a few minutes, I walked over. I couldn't help myself.

 

"Excuse me... can I ask what those cards are?"

She smiled. "These? My secret weapon when I run out of ideas."

 

She showed me the cards. Looked like a regular deck. But each card had a challenge on it:

 

"Find a log and balance three steps along it."

"And this actually works?"

 

"Better than you'd think. Each card has two sides — the front for little ones, 3 and up. The back is harder, for kids 6 and older. They both play at the same time. Each at their own level."

 

"And me? I don't have to run around. I just draw a card, read it out loud — and they play."

 

"Exactly. And the best part? Zero prep. Just pull a card, read it, done. Works anywhere, any weather."

 

"There are three different sets — one for home, one for the city, one for nature."

 

"Oh, and there's a microscope for the older kids and a magnifying viewer for the little ones. My grandson zooms in on everything with the microscope, and my granddaughter loves catching bugs in the viewer to look at them up close. Keeps them both exploring."

 

I glanced over at Jake and Emma. Still bored.

 

"Where can I get these?"

 

She pulled out her phone and showed me the website.

 

I wrote down the name. Pippaloo.

 

I ordered them that same night.

What The Everyday Adventure Formula Changed For Us — And Why This System Works So Well

Three days later, the package arrived. Next visit, I gave it a try.


Ten minutes in: "Grandma, can we watch the tablet?"


"I've got something better."


I pulled out the cards. "Adventure cards. Like a scavenger hunt."


Jake's eyes lit up.


"I draw a card, read it — you do the challenge. Emma gets the easy side, you get the harder one."


I pulled the first card from the Nature deck.


For Emma (4): "Find something soft outside."


For Jake (7): "Find three soft things and put them in order."


And then something incredible happened:


They took off running.


Two minutes later, Emma came back with moss. "Grandma, look!"


I handed her a badge. She beamed.


Jake returned with moss, grass, and a dandelion puff. "The moss is softest!"


Then Jake spotted the microscope.


"Grandma, what's this?"


I showed him. He held it up to the moss.


His eyes went wide. "Whoa! You gotta see this!"


Emma grabbed the bug viewer and caught a ladybug. "I can see all its spots!"


Jake with his microscope, Emma with her bug viewer — both completely absorbed.


I didn't have to run around. I just stood there and watched.

What Changed For Us — And Why This System Actually Works

First: It Covers Everything

 

Not just nature — city and indoors too. Last week it was pouring rain. Before? That would've been tablet day. This time I pulled a card from the "Home" deck. They played in the living room for an hour. No tablet. No whining.

Second: You're Ready Instantly

 

Three complete card sets — Nature, City, Home. 150 cards total with 300 challenges. Draw, read, go — anywhere. On our last trip downtown, I pulled a card. Suddenly that "boring walk" turned into an adventure.

Third: It Works For Different Ages

 

Every card has two difficulty levels — front for ages 3+, back for 6+. Jake doesn't feel bored. Emma doesn't feel frustrated. Finally, no more fighting.

 

I Don't Have To Keep Up Physically Anymore

 

That's the biggest difference.

 

Before, I had to run with them, play with them, be active.

 

Now? I lead the game.

 

I draw a card. I read it out loud. The grandkids run off.

 

And me? I just stand there, watch — and smile.

My Honest Take

The Explorer Bundle Set worked for me.

 

It's worked for hundreds of other grandparents too (the reviews speak for themselves).

 

It's not perfect. It doesn't solve everything. And yes, your grandkids will still ask for the tablet sometimes.

 

But it gives you a real alternative.

 

One that works without physical strain.

 

One that brings siblings together instead of pitting them against each other.

 

One that creates memories that last.Wiederholen

Quick heads-up: When I tried to order a second set for my sister-in-law three weeks ago (birthday gift for her and her granddaughter), it was sold out.
I had to wait almost two weeks for it to come back in stock.
Seems like it's not just me — I've seen several grandmas in my Facebook groups saying the bundle sells out fast.
If you want to try it, I wouldn't wait too long.

 

Explorer Bundle Set

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What Are Other Grandparents Saying About the Explorer Bundle?

Carol Jennings

my grandkids didn't ask for the iPad ONCE last weekend. they just grabbed the cards and went outside. I almost cried 😂🙌

8

Patricia Henderson

my 5 year old walked in and said "grandma we're going on a mission!" two hours in the backyard. no phone. no whining. buying a second set for their house

5

Lorraine Mitchell

works for my 4 year old AND my 9 year old at the same time. easy side for the little one, hard side for the big one. same card no fighting. genius

45

Deborah Carter

that microscope alone is worth it. my grandson (7) looked at a leaf and LOST it. "GRANDMA LOOK AT THIS" for 20 minutes straight 

20

Jacqueline Moore

my grandbabies are 3 and 8 and they've been BEGGING to come over since we got these. I just point and they go. best purchase I've made in years

9

Margaret Sullivan

y knees can't keep up with grandkids anymore but these cards let me sit on the bench and be the "game master" 😊 I read the card, they run off, come back so proud. works for MY energy level

10

Marlene Tucker

grandson is 8 and normally bored after 10 min with anything. the microscope kept him going for over an hour. examining EVERYTHING. leaves, rocks, his own fingernail 😂

20

Carolyn Bennett

three grandkids under 10 and this is the ONLY thing that works for all of them at once. no fighting no whining just fun. we put a flower petal under the microscope and all three huddled around it like it was treasure 🌸

78

Explorer Bundle Set

Sale Ends --

--d --h --m --s

Limited Time 30% Off

Get the Explorer Bundle Now

|

free shipping

60 Day Money-Back Guarantee

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