Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have completed my first week as an empty nester. It. Was. Glorious. I slept great, ate healthily, worked out a ton, worked on my side job, went on a hike, picked up my instrument, and did some decluttering. It feels so freeing not to have anyone else around that needs catering to. No one asking for a conversation at 9:45 PM when I'm ready to crash. No one to worry when they will get home. Glorious. I even got the car detailed so it doesn't have teen stink in it.
It helps that college is going well for the kids, but I am really done with the drudgery of parenting and ready for the next phase!
I never felt like parenting was drudgery. I have a very satisfying job, lots of friends and a happy marriage. But I am feeling sad now that DD is off at college and DS is not far off. I get it OP. I loved all the parenting stuff and will miss it.
Anonymous wrote:The older parents I have known, including colleagues, friends, and neighbors, who were very involved with their teens and dreading the empty nest phase became, in almost every case, much happier than before, once it actually arrived. (After a fairly quick adjustment phase). I have been very struck by that. I think the freedom agrees with almost everyone.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The older parents I have known, including colleagues, friends, and neighbors, who were very involved with their teens and dreading the empty nest phase became, in almost every case, much happier than before, once it actually arrived. (After a fairly quick adjustment phase). I have been very struck by that. I think the freedom agrees with almost everyone.
Great to hear!
Anonymous wrote:The older parents I have known, including colleagues, friends, and neighbors, who were very involved with their teens and dreading the empty nest phase became, in almost every case, much happier than before, once it actually arrived. (After a fairly quick adjustment phase). I have been very struck by that. I think the freedom agrees with almost everyone.
Anonymous wrote:The older parents I have known, including colleagues, friends, and neighbors, who were very involved with their teens and dreading the empty nest phase became, in almost every case, much happier than before, once it actually arrived. (After a fairly quick adjustment phase). I have been very struck by that. I think the freedom agrees with almost everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No this isn’t normal. You should have your own life and your child, not you, should be stressed about college. Join things and get hobbies now.
Come on, PP. This isn't helpful.
Not sure why you think it's not helpful to tell someone who lets their life revolve around their kids to build more of a life for themselves, and how. Seems pretty much like the definition of help.
Np. I kind of get.this, but mine are younger, and everything else in my life already feels meaningless in comparison. I am trying to pick up other things instead of kid-related things (e.g.,.pta etc) but anything else just feels so empty. I see myself marching towards having my life revolve around my kids because nothing else seems even close to as worthwhile to me. How do people avoid this?
Anonymous wrote:I have one in college and one finishing high school. Just like you spend your kid’s HS years teaching/reinforcing how to adult, this is a good time for parents to focus on their own transition.
Pick up an old hobby or find a new one. Make plans with adult friends. Take a class in something new, get involved in a volunteer activity, make a commitment to trying one new restaurant a week, whatever. Basically, tune up those rusty socialization and self-entertainment skills and take them for a spin.
One caveat: While doing stuff with your spouse/partner is part of this, be careful you don’t substitute their care and feeding for your child’s. You are not your husband’s social secretary or cruise director. He has to carve out his own areas, and you are not responsible for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have completed my first week as an empty nester. It. Was. Glorious. I slept great, ate healthily, worked out a ton, worked on my side job, went on a hike, picked up my instrument, and did some decluttering. It feels so freeing not to have anyone else around that needs catering to. No one asking for a conversation at 9:45 PM when I'm ready to crash. No one to worry when they will get home. Glorious. I even got the car detailed so it doesn't have teen stink in it.
It helps that college is going well for the kids, but I am really done with the drudgery of parenting and ready for the next phase!
NP here with a HS kid. Did you expect to feel this way/were you looking forward to an empty nest? Or were you dreading it but pleasantly surprised?
Anonymous wrote:I have completed my first week as an empty nester. It. Was. Glorious. I slept great, ate healthily, worked out a ton, worked on my side job, went on a hike, picked up my instrument, and did some decluttering. It feels so freeing not to have anyone else around that needs catering to. No one asking for a conversation at 9:45 PM when I'm ready to crash. No one to worry when they will get home. Glorious. I even got the car detailed so it doesn't have teen stink in it.
It helps that college is going well for the kids, but I am really done with the drudgery of parenting and ready for the next phase!