Anonymous wrote:I guess I'm feeling a bit differently. I'm seeing my child heading off to college and will no longer be living at home. At some point I'm going to have to share them with a partner. All of that's a good thing and I'm happy and excited to see what the future holds for them. But I am (inwardly and won't show to them) devastated at them leaving. I feel like their childhood is over (b/c it is) and I can't protect them and have them close. I genuinely enjoy my child as a person and I'm going to miss them tremendously.
It's not that I fear being alone with my spouse but going back to that much 1:1 alone time with him is a little overwhelming. We have alone time now but it feels like it's going to be hard to go back to pre-child DINK life. Having had the benefit of our kid, the pre-kid life is not the ideal anymore. I like the bustle of things to do, having people here, having my kid's friends in/out . . .
I also kind of feel like . . . 2/3 of my life is kind of over. I'm feeling mortality. Friends and family are dying and receiving health diagnoses. People are dispersing to retire. I feel like my "tribe" is dissipating.
I'm def feeling down, unhappy, stressed about the big changes coming at me.
Did anyone else feel that way? Or did? How did you deal? I'm not prone to depression but maybe it's a little of it setting in?
I was not prepared when my oldest moved out. I felt like I died. It took me a year to recover.
When my second one left I did much better. He was so ready.
On the way home after dropping him off my husband said we could walk around naked now. LOL. Not me.
The quiet settled into finding hobbies. Junk shop furniture redone. It was fun and time consuming. Good hobby.
When my husband retired he was with me 24/7. I was not used to him being here all the time. We found things to do together. Once a week we chose a place to go and learned to be one again. Not a date, just to do something we never had time to do. Like walking in the mall. We haven't done that in many years.
His transition was harder. He had been working since he was 13. All he knew was work.
I have to say it's been interesting.