Anonymous wrote:Thinking of a 22 YO who died this week and wondering if you understand how lucky you are. Maybe try to feel the gratitude and joy more than the sadness?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want more than Christmas or Thanksgiving, you should go visit him. It’s not fair for young adults to have to do all the travel.
Yes, but how much is an imposition?
Anonymous wrote:Big hugs, OP.
I totally understand what you're saying - that this is a moment you've been working towards the whole time you were raising him, and yet, when it comes, it's also sad to let go.
You did a great job! Go and visit!
Anonymous wrote:Just curious OP, did you have these sort of feelings when he went to college? I feel like that would be the really hard transition, especially because it sounds like you raised a very successful son!
I agree with the other posters. Book trips to see him. Check out some great restaurants near him, combined with some activity that you like on your own. (So, he doesn’t view visits as too much.)
Anonymous wrote:I don’t really understand. You can visit him anytime. You don’t have to worry about exams, or homework or waiting until spring break.
Most kids these days get some work from home so no PTO needed.
Get an Airbnb at a ski resort and spend the week, he can work during the day.
Anonymous wrote:Thinking of a 22 YO who died this week and wondering if you understand how lucky you are. Maybe try to feel the gratitude and joy more than the sadness?
Anonymous wrote:OP did your DS graduate college 1 or 2 years early? Mine is 21 and will graduate in 18 months. No gap years.
Anonymous wrote:He graduated college last spring, secured a really good job this fall, is off our insurance, has his own car and apartment and is living his life independently. When he went home (3 hours away in another city) after the holidays it was the first time I didn't know for sure when he'd be back. There is no "spring break" visit on the horizon. It's unfair to ask him to spend the week of PTO he gets with us, so we will be lucky for a weekend visit here and there. He will text and call and is in touch, but he's gone.
There's so much fear about failure to launch, the nobody talks about the void when they do. Someone tell me it gets easier.