Could 100 million women be wrong? Some people in China think so. The dancing grannies typically get together in public parks to practice, exercise and just, dare we say it, have fun.
This puts some others in a snit. They are reluctant to give over public space to these women. Things have gotten so bad that dogs and feces are now part of the equation.
But the dancing grannies are tough — and numerous. They are the fastest-growing segment of the population.

Back before recorded history (1969 or thereabouts) an M.I.T. scientist referred to a concept he called a “grandmother cell.” Jerry Lettvin was a professor of electrical and bioengineering and communications physiology. He was also a bit of a character. He loved reducing things to their logical inconsistency. He also enjoyed taking intellectual risks. A colleague remembers him asking, “If it does not change everything, why waste your time doing the study?”
Maybe yes, if having fun is defined as being closer to their grandchildren. It may be the extension of that old saying, “A son is a son ‘till he takes a wife; a daughter’s a daughter for the rest of her life.”
Why on earth was I surprised? My own grandmother had a bracelet with a dangling charm for each of her grandchildren. But clearly, I have not kept up with the changes in the grandma jewelry market.
It’s been a quiet few decades on the feminism front. Grandma used to feel sad when she heard that young women didn’t want to identify with the f word, even as they took for granted changes in the work world and on the home front that we, as young women, could only dream of seeing “one day.”
Want to watch a new grandmother splutter and try to retain her self-control? Just ask her about safety. Sure, we know that the goal is to prevent injury and save lives, but sheesh! don’t these people know when to lighten up?
Amy Craton began her college career with high hopes, in 1962. Unfortunately, a divorce and single parenthood forced her to drop out in order to support her four children. Fast forward (maybe not so fast) half a century. In 2013, she decided to finish the degree that she had begun.
When Mary LaCava’s first grandchild went off to college, she tucked a twenty dollar bill into an envelope and, using old hotel stationery, sent it off with a short note. “I figured she could use it,” she recalled. She continued the practice every week.
A British fashion retailer ran a survey to see who Brits thought was the most glamorous grandmother of all: do you think there was any self-interest involved?