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An Empty Nest

Empty Nest

An Empty Nest

Empty Nest

You celebrate when your child receives a college acceptance letter or gets the first job they’ve been hoping for after high school. Furniture is passed on, new sheets are purchased, and you help them move into their new apartment or dorm room. A last kiss on the cheek, a long hug, and then you’re back on the road, going to an empty home. After eighteen-plus years of being a mother or a father, that first step into a childless home can be many things: heart-rending, challenging, exciting or perhaps just lonely. What do you do now?

All parents will one day have to confront the silence of an empty nest. And yet, we know that mothers and fathers deal with the experience in different ways. Fathers, who may have been more removed from their children’s lives due to their careers, tend to want to establish a closer relationship with their grown children. Mothers, on the other hand, used to having an intimate relationship with their children, see a lessening of their roll as family caretaker; suddenly there are no varsity games to attend, no more PTA meetings, less laundry in the hamper, more quiet, free time.

Women many times react positively to this change. Perhaps they choose to get a new job, or revitalize their circles of friends or engage in a hobby that has interested them their entire lives, but to which they’ve never been able to devote adequate time.

But an empty nest causes mothers and fathers to reevaluate their lives in different ways, and it’s not uncommon for marital tensions to escalate. Searching to infuse a new purpose into their lives, the father discovers a renewed interest in familial bonds while the mother realizes the satisfaction that can accompany her own job, hobby or meetings with friends. Either spouse may look for attention or excitement outside the marriage in an extra marital affair. Unfortunately, these new stresses can sometimes lead to separation or even divorce.

How can a couple best handle these matters? Talking to a family therapist can help resolve marital tensions. While couples only have to experience that first step into an empty nest once, therapists spend their entire lives working with couples and individuals as they decide how to confront the next phase of their lives.

By helping couples understand that men and women respond to this situation in different manners, a therapist can act as a neutral mediator, provide a safe environment for discussion and aid in opening the couple’s lanes of communication. For a couple, this understanding can potentially lead to mutual respect and appreciation as they embark on a new, exiting era of their lives.

Kissing your child on the cheek and giving him, or her, a strong hug is an end of one portion of your life. But that first step into your empty home doesn’t have to be purely upsetting or saddening. That step can be viewed as the beginning of a new, satisfying period for a couple, filled with shared appreciation and excitement.

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Disclaimer: The entire contents of this website are based upon the opinions of Peggy Levinson, unless otherwise noted. Individual articles are based upon the opinions of the respective author, who retains copyright as marked. The information on this website is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional and is not intended as medical advice. It is intended as a sharing of knowledge and information based on the experience of Peggy Levinson and her community. Peggy Levinson encourages you to make your own health care decisions based upon your research and in partnership with a qualified health care professional.