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Testimonials

Finding our NannyGranny was a life-line. She's brought warmth, dependability, and calm into our busy home. We'd be lost without her!
Renee
Kosciuszko national park | 2 children

The ClubHouse

What the Federal Budget said without saying it
Australian families face rising cost of living, childcare stress, and small business pressure. 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Beneath the frustration around cost of living, childcare, small business pressures, housing, and productivity, something more fundamental is surfacing: Australian families are exhausted. This isn't exactly new. Family pressure and overwhelm have been building inside Australian households for years. What feels different now is the intensity. The response to this year's Federal Budget suggests many families and small business owners are no longer simply feeling stretched – they're questioning how much more they can take. Perhaps that's because our government continues to treat family life, childcare, and small business as separate policy topics, when in reality, they are deeply connected. My husband and I have spent the last seven years living inside that intersection. We founded NannyGranny in 2018 after struggling ourselves as working parents raising young children away from extended family support. Like many families, we were juggling work, raising children, trying to build a business, and attempting to hold everything together without the village structures many of us grew up with. Over time, our lives became an endless cycle of school logistics, activities, emails, mental load, rushed dinners, and trying to keep everything functioning. The magic of family life was there, but over time, the administrative churn had started to overshadow the joy. Back then, we assumed that intensity belonged to a particular season of life. Young children, busy careers, and no family around - we told ourselves things would settle down as the kids got older. Then last September, we found ourselves back at the kitchen table re-evaluating our choices and priorities as a family, trying to work out how we could relieve some of the pressure. Our children were now tweens and we realised we were about halfway through our parenting years with them still at home. That moment forced a difficult question: "Is this really how we want to live?" Not; "Are we successful enough? Ambitious enough? Productive enough?" Just; "Are we actually living well as a family?" After a lot of discussion, we decided to relocate to New Zealand for the 2026 school year on a working sabbatical while continuing to run and build NannyGranny remotely. Not to escape Australia, but to create some breathing room as a family, and as small business owners. After seven years building NannyGranny inside the constant rhythm of work, school logistics, and everyday life, we wanted some space to step back and reflect on how families are actually living - and what kind of future we were trying to build for our children, ourselves, and the community that NannyGranny provides for. Five months into that experience - and watching the fallout from the Federal Budget from a little further away – I'm increasingly convinced that the frustrations people are expressing are symptoms of something bigger. During our time building NannyGranny, we've spoken with thousands of parents, caregivers and small business owners. Different industries. Different life stages. Different circumstances, yet the same themes surface again and again: pressure, financial strain, burnout, isolation, and the growing feeling that modern family life is becoming impossible to do well. I think this is what our government underestimated in the Budget response. Family life, childcare and small business are not separate issues. They are deeply interconnected. Most small businesses in Australia aren't abstract economic entities or run by tech bros. They are hard-working families serving their communities. Hairdressers, tradies, café and restaurant owners, retailers, cleaners… regular Australians trying to build livelihoods while simultaneously raising children, caring for others, and contributing to their communities. When our leaders fail to recognise the interdependence of family life and small business, the consequences ripple through the entire system. When families aren't supported, small businesses falter. When small businesses falter, communities lose jobs, services and connection. And when communities lose those supports, families are forced to carry even more on their own. These are not separate problems. They are part of the same ecosystem. Childcare matters enormously - but not simply as a workforce issue. Families need support systems that offer flexibility, connection and real choice so they can create healthy, sustainable lives and nurture the next generation. Judging by the reaction to this year's Federal Budget, we are still a long way from recognising that strong families, thriving small businesses and connected communities are not competing priorities – they are the foundation of a prosperous nation. Interestingly, while much of the Western world continues to frame caregiving and family life as secondary to economic productivity, some countries appear to be moving in a different direction. This Mother's Day, the UAE announced it would begin reframing "housewives" as "generation shapers" - recognising caregiving as something that helps shape families and society itself. Regardless of how people feel about the language, the underlying idea matters enormously. Caregiving is not separate from economic life. It makes economic life possible. Watching the backlash to the Federal Budget from over the ditch, I've become increasingly convinced that many of our policy debates start from the wrong assumption. Families, carers and small business owners are often treated as separate groups competing for attention, support or funding. In reality, they are deeply interconnected. Most small businesses are built and sustained by families. Most families rely on small businesses for employment, flexibility and local economic activity. All communities rely on both. And when one is under pressure, the other inevitably feels it too. With some distance from the daily grind of commuting, juggling schedules and simply making it through the day, I see even more clearly how much responsibility families and small business owners quietly carry on behalf of the rest of us. They are raising the next generation, caring for ageing relatives, creating jobs, supporting local communities and absorbing enormous amounts of risk and uncertainty. They're not asking for special treatment. They're asking for some breathing space to keep doing the work that makes our way of life possible. And if we are serious about Australia's future prosperity, we need to stop seeing families and small businesses as separate policy problems and start recognising them for what they are: the social and economic foundations on which our future depends. Paige Kilburn is the founder of NannyGranny, a platform helping Australian families reconnect with experienced caregivers and rebuild the village around modern family life.
#Wellbeing
The Psychology of Secure Attachment: How Grandparent-Style Care Supports Ki...
Attachment theory shows us that children thrive when they feel consistently safe and cared for. At its heart, secure attachment is about children knowing two things: I can rely on you when I need comfort and I am free to explore because you’ve got my back. Grandparent-style care, which our NannyGrannies embody, naturally fosters this. With warmth, patience, and calm reassurance, they act as a secure base for children.  Understanding Secure Attachment  Psychologist John Bowlby defined attachment as the deep emotional bond that connects one person to another across time and space. For children, secure attachment is built through consistent, responsive, and nurturing care.  Securely attached children:  - Trust that their needs will be met.  - Develop confidence to explore their world.  - Learn how to regulate emotions.  - Build healthy relationships later in life.  Why NannyGrannies Are Perfect Attachment Figures  1. Experience with Children - Many NannyGrannies have raised kids or grandkids, so they intuitively know how to respond with patience and care.  2. Calm Presence - Life experience often brings a grounded calmness that reassures children in moments of distress.  3. Consistency - Unlike ad-hoc care, NannyGrannies form ongoing relationships with families, giving children reliable connection.  4. Attunement - They listen, notice, and respond - keys to building emotional security.  Psychological Benefits for Kids  Children who experience secure attachment through intergenerational care show:  - Greater self-esteem.  - Lower risk of anxiety and depression.  - Stronger problem-solving and resilience.  - Better social skills and empathy.  For Families  When parents are stretched thin, knowing their child is cared for by someone who provides safety and warmth is invaluable. It reduces parental stress and increases family harmony.    ✅ Give your child the gift of security. With consistent, loving care from parents and NannyGrannies, children grow up feeling safe, confident, and ready to thrive
#Wellbeing
The upside of ageing
Forget “forever young”, a new generation of women are embracing their age and all of the wisdom it brings. For decades, society – with help of beauty advertisers – has whispered that women ought do everything in their power to turn back the clock. From beauty products to surgery to references to “bravery” when celebrities dare display grey hair or wrinkles, the subtle message that youth reigns supreme has been undeniable. But with Hollywood royalty like Sarah-Jessica Parker, 58, and Susan Sarandon, 77, talking loudly about age positivity, women all over the world are starting to question the ageing fear mongering that has gone virtually unchallenged for decades. “We spend so much time talking about the accumulation of time [by] adding up in wrinkles … it’s the weirdest thing that we don’t say, ‘It adds up to being better at your job; better as a friend; better as a daughter; better as a partner; better as a caregiver; better as a sister,’” says Parker, who most of us know as Carrie on iconic series Sex And The City. “Instead it’s, ‘How do we suspend the exterior? How do we apologise for it? How do we fix it?’” So entrenched is many women’s fear of visible ageing that research shows 90 percent of women feel anxious about ageing, and that we worry more about our ageing appearance than about having enough money for retirement. “You're very lucky to age. If [you aren't], you're dead! Ageing is a good thing. I think it means staying healthy,” says Susan Sarandon. “I think there's something about not giving up and becoming invisible, which is what our society has a tendency to do. I hear women [of a certain age] talking about becoming invisible. My interpretation of anti-ageing means anti-becoming invisible.” Meanwhile, Family Ties actress Justine Bateman’s new book, Face: One Square Foot of Skin, interviews 47 women about ageing and the pressure to continue to look young as they age. “Why do we even have these ideas in society that a woman's face is broken and needs to be fixed?" she says on Fox News. “The idea that it's almost a woman's duty or responsibility to start cutting it up and injecting it after a certain age or doing it preventatively… I wish people would see it's just a marketing tool. They put the fear in them that if you don't do it, all these bad things will happen to you, which is just so silly and ridiculous." Closer to home, Australian women aged over 50 are increasingly presenting popular morning and lifestyle shows on free-to-air TV, demonstrating a shift from the outdated “boys club” of TV to a world that celebrates the wisdom mature women can bring. “I’m at a stage in my life where I feel quite comfortable in my own skin,” says Kylie Gillies, co-host of Channel Seven’s The Morning Show. “For every extra line or crow’s foot … guess what? It comes with a bonus offer … of extra knowledge, empathy, wisdom.” The good news is, that if we can all sign up to the “positive ageing” movement, psychologists say we’ll experience physical and mental health improvements, through an increased sense of control and better quality of life as you face another part of the life cycle. So how can we better embrace our bodies and minds to remove the pressure to visibly wind back the clock, and simply make the most of our mature years? Sarah Jessica Parker calls for us to focus on optimism and the joy of living over a fear of ageing. “Optimism is almost like a vitamin, or some type of battery, or something I use when I need to resurface,” she tells Gritty Pretty. “When things are difficult or complicated, it gives me the resilience I need. And in the good times, it pushes me to be creative, outrageous, and truly enjoy the time I get to spend just living.” And that’s not to say we have to bin all our beauty products either – we simply ought consider using them to highlight our present features, not to try recreate the past. "Beauty products should enhance who you are, rather than making you into someone you don’t feel comfortable with,” Susan Sarandon adds. “You find your own style. Don’t try to be someone else, not everything works,"
#Lifestyle