Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I view this differently than most people, but I still have young children (7 and 4). I'm glad the younger one won't be off to college until I'm 56! That still feels very young to me. My husband and I had our 20's/early 30's to travel, explore and focus on careers, save money, go to grad school, have fun with friends and spend time with our families. We're planning to retire or semi-retire in our mid-50s so that will hopefully be another fun chapter. We both lost a parent as young adults so know that health can change at any moment and are grateful we were able to spend our time as we have so far.
This.
My spouse died when our youngest was a college freshman so I went from empty nester to widow. My plans to retire in my 50s are now scrapped. No plans to travel since it's just me.
Anonymous wrote:What is the ideal age to be an empty nester, and what age will you be one?
My children will be 18/20 when I am 42. I already have an empty home while they are at their father's home, I have fun with friends while they are gone. 42 seems a bit young to have grown children, but I'm also hoping I'll have money to travel by then and have enough energy to be adventurous. I'm currently 30.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I view this differently than most people, but I still have young children (7 and 4). I'm glad the younger one won't be off to college until I'm 56! That still feels very young to me. My husband and I had our 20's/early 30's to travel, explore and focus on careers, save money, go to grad school, have fun with friends and spend time with our families. We're planning to retire or semi-retire in our mid-50s so that will hopefully be another fun chapter. We both lost a parent as young adults so know that health can change at any moment and are grateful we were able to spend our time as we have so far.
This.
My spouse died when our youngest was a college freshman so I went from empty nester to widow. My plans to retire in my 50s are now scrapped. No plans to travel since it's just me.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I view this differently than most people, but I still have young children (7 and 4). I'm glad the younger one won't be off to college until I'm 56! That still feels very young to me. My husband and I had our 20's/early 30's to travel, explore and focus on careers, save money, go to grad school, have fun with friends and spend time with our families. We're planning to retire or semi-retire in our mid-50s so that will hopefully be another fun chapter. We both lost a parent as young adults so know that health can change at any moment and are grateful we were able to spend our time as we have so far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was excited to have my kids relatively young (28 and 31) but I’m actually sad I will be an empty jester so young. I’m jealous of my same aged friends who will have their kids home many more years because they started later. I didn’t think about that when I had them young. I am looking forward to traveling, but we will still have at least another decade of working after the youngest leaves.
I had my first at the same age (second took longer) and don't really see the point of having an empty nest before retirement. There's no way we're retiring before 62 at the earliest, especially if we want to help the kids with college - spouse works for a university where they could go free, but it's small, not highly ranked, and obviously extremely close to home. So they go to college and we still have 10+ years to...keep going to work every day, eat dinner by ourselves, and what? It's not like a new world of travel and socializing is going to open up.
That said, I don't wish I'd waited longer to have them, fertility issues are real. Not for everyone but for a lot of us.
Anonymous wrote:I was excited to have my kids relatively young (28 and 31) but I’m actually sad I will be an empty jester so young. I’m jealous of my same aged friends who will have their kids home many more years because they started later. I didn’t think about that when I had them young. I am looking forward to traveling, but we will still have at least another decade of working after the youngest leaves.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely younger the better to become empty nesters. At the same time, it is better to be child free in your 20's.