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Lisa Belkin

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My Empty Nest: The Opposite Of What I Expected This To Be

Posted: 10/22/2012 10:07 am

I come home each night, and things are as they were when I left. If there are shoes in the front hall, they are mine. I can always find the TV remote. The car is likely to need gas (that was Alex's favorite job) and the dog is in need of love and a walk (Evan was the one who best kept track.) There are no clothes on the floor of their bedrooms, no lights blazing during daylight in the hall, no empty snack boxes left behind in the cabinets after their contents have been eaten.

Everything is in the same place, but nothing is exactly where it should be.

Sending your first child off to college is seen as a start -- for them, for you. Sending the last is seen as a finish line. Beginnings. Endings. Words that should contradict each other, and yet I am feeling both at the same time. "Empty nester!" friends exclaim. "How is it?"

Just as I thought it would be. And completely the opposite.

I had expected to have more free time, and I do. The kitchen calendar looks spare without school concerts and SAT test dates and tennis practice. Family dinner is no longer a requirement, but rather a possibility -- something my husband and I rustle up if both of us are hungry, not a mandatory buffer between my boys and delinquency. There is a lot less laundry.

But time is a chameleon, and most days I lose track of it against the backdrop of too much to do. When the boys were infants I would wonder how on earth I used to spend all the hours before they were born. Now that I have those hours back, I marvel at how I ever crammed their needs and mine into any single day.

I had also expected to worry about them when they were away. And I do. Did they get their flu shots? Will they remember the (many) talks about "good choices"? If I haven't heard from them for awhile does that mean they are doing just great, or not well at all? On the other hand, the worry is mixed with reassurance. I have seen how they manage -- flourish -- without me. It's one thing to know they can pedal while you run along side them, and another thing entirely to stand still and watch while they bike up a mountain.

Do I miss them? Yes. More than I'd guessed. But, also (if you have read this far, you won't be surprised to hear this), less. Am I unmoored by having lost my primary role in life? No, because I took great pride over the years in the fact that my identity was not dependent upon theirs. But, surprisingly -- jarringly -- yes. Because, well, let's say my pride was a little misplaced. Perhaps being their mother didn't define me while I was doing it -- but being a different kind of mother certainly defines me now.

The missing, the disorientation, comes at unexpected moments: seeing the school bus drive by; watching the season premiere of "Parks and Recreation" all alone; starting to put too many plates on the table. When they are feeling sick and I can't test their foreheads for a fever. When they have doubts about schoolwork or friendships or job prospects, and I can only say "I'm sure you will figure it out." Whenever a hug would once have been the answer.

And yet, the spaces emptied by loss are more than filled by what I've found. Their texts and phone calls -- not because they have to, nor to ask for anything, just because they want to talk. Their genuine interest in what is going on with me. The chance to see them anew each time they reappear, to see them as the whole world does, but also like no one else ever will. As adults. Adults I happened to help create.

The weekend before the boys both left for their separate campuses, my husband and his sister spent days sorting through what was now theirs after their father's recent death. It had all arrived in a U-Haul, and for two days we lifted one item at a time, sparking memories. This glassware that had seen many a Thanksgiving. That ceramic vase that had somehow survived the horrific house fire. The artwork bought just a few years ago for their new home on Cape Cod, long after the children were grown and gone. The family portraits of four, then six, then eight, ten, eleven. The gifts given to them by grandchildren.

Decades blurred together in the piles. There was no line that said before and after, nest empty, nest full. The people my in-laws were before they were parents blended with who they were during and after. The same, but different. Ready for what came next, and completely unprepared.

In the days that followed, the boxes of the grandfather mixed with those of the grandsons in our front hall. Generations being reshuffled. New mantles being borne. Space being cleared, and being refilled. Then, in a blink, they were gone. The boys' rooms feel sparse, and their closets echo. But the walls are now covered anew in artwork that hung in their father's home back when he left it for college.

I feel the sadness I'd expected, but also such joy. I'd known they would leave, but now I also know that they find their way back.

My nest is empty. But overflowing.

 
 
 

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I come home each night, and things are as they were when I left. If there are shoes in the front hall, they are mine. I can always find the TV remote. The car is likely to need gas (that was Alex's fa...
I come home each night, and things are as they were when I left. If there are shoes in the front hall, they are mine. I can always find the TV remote. The car is likely to need gas (that was Alex's fa...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason Ungar
12:56 PM on 10/24/2012
I read this and it hits hard. At night when all is quiet I get a sadness that's hard to put into words. Even though most of the day I wish for ten minuets of quiet! (I stay home with two toddlers) But then I wake up and we get to do it all over again. . I'll never forget when my folks moved me to college and everyone was busy doing stuff and I took out the trash. I turned the corner and my mom was in tears trying to hold it together. I didn't know what to say other than don't worry Mom I will always be your little boy. I imagine that was the best and worst thing I could have said!
06:08 PM on 10/23/2012
Sometimes, when I'm overwhelmed with the frenetic energy and chaos of life with two sons, I wonder what life will be like when they leave. How quiet it will be. How much less messy. You've put into words so much of what I anticipate, although I worry more than it sounds like you did about having lost a piece of myself along the road to their independence. It's coming, faster than I ever thought possible.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
D. A. Wolf
Founder, Daily Plate of Crazy
05:53 PM on 10/23/2012
I think you capture the strangeness (and contentment) of these moments impeccably. Like you, I sent one off to college which was relatively easy, but sending the second son off hit me hard - especially as the Empty Nest was truly silent after so many years during which we were a threesome.

There are moments when I forget they aren't here and I ache for their laughter, their voices, and their constantly reappearing friends. At other times, the calm to a quiet house in which to work (and my car keys where I left them) is a relative relief.

More than anything, there are surprises for which I'm grateful - one son calling to share a story about a project, and another, to discuss his plans for graduate school and solicit my feedback - adult-to-adult.

A beautiful piece that hits home, Lisa. Thank you.
iridium53
Semper Fi
05:17 PM on 10/23/2012
Empty nest?
BEST thing ever.
12:45 PM on 10/23/2012
Thanks for this. It's nice to know that mixed feelings are to be expected in this exercise. My oldest (21) is gone and refuses all contact, and my youngest (17) doesn't ever plan to leave. I worry for both of them, differently. I'm angry at and terrified for the older. I'm impatient with and grateful for the younger. And occasionally, out of the blue, I burst into tears ... usually while reading something you've written, as it rings the bell of my inner grief. Probably a good thing, and cheaper than therapy! Hugs.
11:31 AM on 10/23/2012
It has been ten years since my only child, a son, left for college. I had a hard time the first year and intruded too much into his life and space. I finally learned to live on my own (I'm divorced). This past weekend my son married. This transition seems much more final. Like a good husband, which he will definitely be, he defers to his new wife in feminine matters, like what he wears, what food to eat/serve, who will be invited to things, how to decorate. I love my new daughter-in-law but she is not a pushover and she will definitely establish "their" home without me, which is also the right thing. But I do feel I have finally lost him. It is bittersweet, because although he is gone and lives several states away from me, I hope for grandchildren (whom I will spoil shamelessly) and I also take great pride both in the fact that his wife's family believes she has made quite a "catch" and they adore him and in the respect he seems to have from those who know him. He is launched well and fully, which is what I believe we should all hope to happen with our children.
10:31 AM on 10/23/2012
When mine left, everything in the refrigerator froze. For so many years they'd been grazing the frig for hours with the door open the the setting had gravitated to the coldest. With the door closed all day, the frig turned into a freezer.
09:33 AM on 10/23/2012
Never again will I complain about tripping over shoes that were left at the door, the last minute school projects or cookies needed for the following day. I will savor every moment. Great article Lisa!
04:07 AM on 10/23/2012
My sons were 18 and 22 when my daughter was born. I didn't give the empty nest a real chance to take hold for long. Now that my daughter is approaching her teen years, and my youngest son just turned 30, the reality of time flying by is finally hitting home. After my daughter was born, I was filled with awe to be parenting at both ends of the continuum simultaneously ... welcoming new life into our home while letting go ever more of the guys as they ventured further out into the world on their own. Through their sister, I remembered the little boys they once were even as I looked up to see their growing beards. Through her older brothers, I experienced my newborn girl as all grown up and delighted in her every milestone with greater appreciation. The journey of being a parent challenges and blesses us every step of the way. Our children always seem to us wise beyond their years ... and, also, forever those little ones we ushered into this world with so much hope and boundless love. Looking back over my shoulder from this vantage point down the road and, also, at the winding road ahead, I am filled with emptiness and fullness ... and endless gratitude for all of the lessons I have learned as a parent at every turn.
01:13 AM on 10/23/2012
well I am crying just reading about your experience- good tears but tears. My oldest is a senior this year and I am bracing for the changes ahead for us all. We live in London and he will go to college back in the US. My younger son perhaps sees it more clearly then the rest of us. He knows he will be left with me, an slightly empty me. He is the neat, self sufficient one- think he needs to work on being just a little messy and needy in order to really help me!
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jf12
Esta vez saldré como las otras y me escaparé.
10:14 PM on 10/22/2012
I used to think my wife did little enough when my son still lived at home, but she usually managed to rustle one family meal together. On week days.
08:39 PM on 10/22/2012
I try to think of what it will feel like when my (now) 9-year-old and 6-year-old leave for college. I cannot. But just today, I found an empty Goldfish bag precariously resting on a pantry shelf, wadded up socks on the kitchen floor and many other of the things I know I will both miss and celebrate.

You describe this stage and all its juxtapositions so beautifully. And hopefully. Thank you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
teatwerp
the 2012 teadump is coming
08:27 PM on 10/22/2012
When the last one leaves,life really changes. You expressed the ambivalent feelings perfectly.
08:17 PM on 10/22/2012
Lisa, my only child is a Sophomore at Kentucky State University and I am a young empty nester (38y/o). Some would consider me the envy of my peers and parent cohorts but you have eloquently shared the other side of this stage in parenting - it can be very lonely. I am so very proud of my son and remind myself daily that God has Blessed us beyond my wishes but I MISS MY SON. Thank you providing this space for others like me to relate.
07:42 PM on 10/22/2012
I so enjoyed reading this article and can definitely relate. Thank you!