Rebuilding The Nest When Children Leave Home
by Jane Benitez on Nov 02, 2009 with 10 Comments
Leaving home is a major milestone in the series of steps children take toward independence, each one poignant in its own way.

By: kittenpuff1
For women in their forties, children leaving home are also a time of mixed emotions. On one hand we may have trouble believing they’re really old enough to be capable of being on their own, how can they not need us anymore? We may think back with poignancy to when they were small, helpless, and utterly dependent on us. One woman I know used a supermarket analogy. “When my babies were out of diapers, I’d walk down the aisle and say, ‘I don’t need those anymore.’ Then I walked down the aisle with the sanitary supplies and Midol, and I realized that my daughters needed that but I wouldn’t for much longer, and soon they’d leave home and I wouldn’t buy these things for them anymore. What aisle do I head for next?”
Leaving home is a major milestone in the series of steps children take toward independence, each one poignant in its own way. I remember my husband’s puzzlement when I tearfully told him our oldest son, then six, had lost his first perfect little baby tooth. “Well, isn’t that supposed to happen?” he asked cautiously. “But you don’t understand,” I remember saying, almost in anguish. “He’s not a baby anymore.”

By: puravida
When young men and women who were babies only the blink of an eye ago leave home, we inherit a cavernous feeling somewhere in our hearts, even if we do look forward to the additional freedom. If your children are going out into the world, I suggest you have your own graduation of sorts to mark this significant time in your career as a mother:

By: click
- Start by acknowledging the feelings you have about this change in your life, whether it is a sense of loss or relief, or a mixture of both. Whether they strike out for a college across the country or for the next town to live in an apartment, it’s still a big change not to see your children daily, and you can expect to miss them, even if your relationship with them has been stormy at times.
- Review your strengths as a parent. Think about the qualities, knowledge, and traditions your children are taking out into the world that you gave them. Much of what they will become will reflect your importance in their life.
- Take time to consider the ways you want to continue to act as your children’s mentor after they leave home.
- Talk to other women whose children have left home, and take comfort in hearing about what it was like for them. When my oldest son was getting ready to leave home for the first time, my dear friend Nancy provided me with such solace. Her oldest was already out in the world, and she gently reminded me that children do come back, for holidays, for advice, for companionship on different terms. “A child leaving home isn’t an event but a process,” she said, sensible words that sustained me through a time of strong and mixed emotions.
- Have a discussion with your spouse about this change in your lives. He may share some of your feelings about seeing a child become an adult, and recollections about all you’ve both learned through parenthood can be mutually reassuring.
- Most important, decide on what you would like to gain from this change in your life: more solitude for yourself, additional time with your spouse, a different dynamic with the child who has left home, or a change in your relationship with other children who are still at home are all possibilities.
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Published in: Family












ken bultman | Nov 2, 2009 | Reply
Wonderful post about an awkward period in a family’s life. Let’s just hope it takes. Humans are the only species that allows its young to return home.
Christine Ramsay | Nov 2, 2009 | Reply
An interesting piece. My older son didn’t leave home until he was thirty five. I was so pleased when he did as he was causing so much strain in the family because he wanted to move on but could not afford to. In the end we bought him a place. Now we are all good friends again. Sometimes they stay that little bit too long.
Christine
Themax | Nov 2, 2009 | Reply
Really wonderful post thanks
added as friend!!!
Ruby Hawk | Nov 2, 2009 | Reply
Oh, what can we do, when they do leave just be thankful and enjoy it.
mo hoyal | Nov 3, 2009 | Reply
This was a wonderful and thoughtful article Jane, thank you so much.
I’ve been an empty nester for quite some time and I got used to it somewhat, but I thank God daily that my grandchildren now invade my spaces! Sometimes there will be a page to pop up in MY legal pad for writing-and it will say, “I love you MeMo”. This is a heart melter and I am so glad my nest is not as empty as it could be!
Teves | Nov 3, 2009 | Reply
Very nice photo provided…
alc | Nov 5, 2009 | Reply
Looking forward to reading more from you!
sunshine926 | Nov 7, 2009 | Reply
I enjoyed this article a lot. Great one. It made me understand a little bit as to why it is so hard for my parents to understand that kids are not kids and they do grow up. They take it very personally as a sign of rejection. But why would you want to move out when you have everything here?
simplyoj | Nov 12, 2009 | Reply
Reality of life, grown up kids have to live on their own. Enjoy the moment if they are still around. Nice post. Parents who are left alone can have time for the things they love to do that they have set aside while upbringing the kids. By some hobbies like writing, gardening, painting etc they will be busy and will not be lonely.
CutestPrincess | Nov 20, 2009 | Reply
we, filipinos are very family-oriented… we always love our parents by our side though we have our own family, we take our parents along with us or sometimes we staying to our parents side..