I'm not sure I like the term "empty nest" as a description of life when children grow up and leave home.
Have you ever seen a used empty nest?
Some type of little brown birds used to build a nest every year on top of the corner post of the porch. We could watch their life cycle from our front door: the parents building the nest, the mother sitting, the babies growing and straining their beaks toward the food brought by the parents.
Finally, the parent birds would fly to a nearby bush and call for the babies to come. The babies didn't move from the nest at first. But eventually, one by one, they flew off.
When we were sure they weren't coming back, we'd take the nest down and brush away the debris of broken twigs and bird droppings from the post. The nest itself was a mess, as four or five baby birds lived there for weeks without a designated spot for relieving themselves.
Mother bird and I share similarities of raising a flock who have successfully gone on to live independently as adults. But that tattered, speckled, messy weaving of twigs doesn't match up with how I envision my home or life after grown children leave.
As my oldest sons approached adulthood, I wasn't sure how I'd cope when they left home. I always felt being a wife and mother were my main responsibilities and priorities. How could such an intense relationship with daily interaction abruptly change? How could I suddenly flip a switch from full-time mother to a "retired" one?
Actually, it wasn't such a sudden switch after all. From the time we first teach them to feed and dress themselves and become responsible, we show them how to start operating independently of us. As they learn to drive, become involved in youth group or music lessons or a part-time job, they spend more and more time away from us. They go to camp and then youth group mission trips. When they go away to college, they take first steps towards adult living while coming home for breaks. (Even though mine commuted to college while living at home, they spent their days and evenings away.)
So by the time kids leave home, they and their parents have had some experience being separated.
Still, that initial move away from home is hard. My middle son left first, getting married a couple of months after college graduation. It didn't hit me until he started bringing home boxes to pack his stuff in. When I got teary, he made a sign that said "Sewing Room" and put it on his door.
Even though he didn't live under our roof after marriage, he and his wife lived just a few minutes away, and we saw them frequently.
Then we found out that we were going to be the ones moving away when my husband's job transferred him to TN.
My oldest lived at home for a while after graduation, not sure what his next steps should be. But when we found we were moving, he decided it was time to step out. He had several friends in RI, and one of them offered him a job.
So it felt like our "nest" emptied by two-thirds all at once, as we left my middle son and his wife in SC, and our oldest went to RI, and we moved to TN.
That was agonizingly hard for all of us.
My youngest son moved with us, finished high school, and attended college locally. He lived at home for a few more years, but moved out a couple of years ago. He's not far away, thankfully, though he's talking about (and I am praying against) possibly moving to Washington state or Canada.
So my "nest" has been officially empty for a few years now. Here are some thoughts that helped the transition.
Though our children don't live at home any more, I have not stopped being a mother.
I miss the everyday hearing how their day went and knowing what they're up to. But I'm abundantly thankful for texts, emails, and FaceTime.
Sometimes they ask advice, and I try to refrain from offering any unless asked.
We still see each other frequently.
I still pray for them, sometimes I think even more intensely.
Though wifing and mothering were my first priorities, they weren't exclusive. How much to be involved in other things was always a struggle as my children were growing up. But I felt service, both within church and to individual people, was important. I wanted to serve, but I also wanted them to see service was a normal part of Christian life.
I also wanted them to see that hobbies and friendships with others outside the home were healthy.
I had things to look forward to when my kids moved out. Though I missed them, I enjoyed turning one of their bedrooms into a sewing/craft room. Not only was that fun, but it helped so much to have a place for all my materials, to work on projects, and to leave them out.
I look forward to writing more.
I enjoy being able to pick up and and go somewhere with my husband without concerns about babysitters or teenagers at home.
I could "mother" others. Titus 2 specifically instructs older women to teach and encourage younger women. Sometimes that happens via a formal mentoring situation; most often it happens through friendships and "doing life" together. Though we might not consider ourselves "older women" when the nest first empties, we're older than someone and can encourage them along the way.
Phyllis Le Peau followed Jesus' admonition "to feed the hungry, care for widows, and visit those in prison." She found ways to serve in each of those areas.
My mother-in-law's hospice chaplain had taken on that as well as a jail ministry in retirement years.
An older lady in our church took it upon herself to visit my mother-in-law a couple of times a month in assisted living. When we moved and my mother-in-law lived with us, one lady in the church wrote regular newsy notes.
Though physical issues may arise and strength may wane as we get older, there are still a number of ways older women can serve others.
I think older women are some of the best at what someone called the "ministry of the pew"--showing an interest and talking with others. At every church we visited in the last year and a half, there was always an older woman who went beyond "We're glad to have you with us" to make us feel especially welcome.
God's grace is sufficient for every need at hand. God will enable us to transition to the empty nest years when they arrive---not three years before. He is always with those who believe on Him. He created the family structure such that our children grow up, "leave father and mother," and serve Him as adults. We can trust Him for our children as they leave the nest, and for ourselves as we serve Him in different ways.
I loved being a full-time mother. But God doesn't want me to live with regret and longing for the past. He has something for me at each new stage of life.
(I often link up with some of these bloggers.)
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