|
|
|||
... Midlife Improvement
|
|
||
Search LifeTwo:Get Our Newsletter!Stay up to date on midlife issues -- subscribe to our monthly email newsletter (you can easily unsubscribe later)! Visit Our Store!Visit our store at Amazon to see books and other products we recommend -- like this: Your LifeTwoIn this area, registered users see recommendations, set bookmarks, and track what their buddies are up to. For more on the benefits of registering, go here. User loginThings You Can Do On LifeTwo
Follow us on Twitter and get tweets when new posts go up! Click on the Twitter logo to go to our page at Twitter, and then click the "follow" button. Subscribe in a Reader:Use the icon above to subscribe to LifeTwo's Home Page in a reader like My Yahoo or Google Reader (see this page to learn more about RSS and for information on our other feeds). Or if you use one of the following services, just click on its icon:
|
|||
New On LifeTwo's HomepageRecent DiscussionsRecent Comments |
|||
Life After Kids
Submitted by gypsynester on March 25, 2008 - 8:19am.
When Veronica and I came up with the idea to write about life after raising kids, and actually looking forward to it, one of the first things I did was Google "empty nesters." I wanted to see if anyone was looking at this the same way we are. You know, isn’t it great that the kids have moved out and we have life to ourselves again? To be untethered and free to wander the globe. To be Gypsy Nesters instead of empty nesters. But no, just about everything I could find is lamenting how terrible it is to not have the kids around anymore. The main item on the first page I clicked into was an enormous ad for an Alzheimer’s patch. Holy crap! We just finished raising our kids, we’re not dead! If twenty some odd years of child rearing has caused me to lose some memory (or eyesight, hearing, mobility or... um... I forget... whatever..) by golly I’m gonna count it as a plus and learn to like it. Do I really want to remember every battle fought along the way? I think not. I’ll gladly let my memory fade just enough to color the overall picture and recall it as pretty good stuff. I must be missing something here. Are these people daft? There is even a syndrome name now, because these days even the smallest emotion or complaint must be labeled as a syndrome, Empty Nest Syndrome. No doubt, right this second, several pharmaceutical giants are frantically testing some drug that was originally intended to treat some truly dreadful disease to see if they can market it as the only way to escape the treacherous death grip of EMPTY NEST SYNDROME. That reminds me, I didn’t sleep all that great last night, I must remember to get to the doctor to get something done about this insidious Periodic Interrupted Sleep Syndrome (better known as PISS) that I’m suffering from. But I digress, (yet another syndrome perhaps?) back to the original dilemma. Shouldn’t we be looking forward to this portion of life? Most of us have made more than a few sacrifices to get here, so I say, stick a fork in me, I’m done. It’s not selfish to take a little time for yourself at this point, it’s insane not to. We are animals, and as such, continuation of the species is one of our prime motivations. However, unlike the other critters, when we have finished the job, we’re allowed to have some fun. Give yourself a pat on the back! Job well done, the kids have grown up into large human beings fully capable of feeding themselves. I, for one, am a firm believer in letting them do their own hunting and gathering. Trust me, when they get hungry, they will find food, but you have to let them do it for themselves. Otherwise they’ll end up like zoo animals. If you feed the tigers everyday, they never learn to hunt. Then when you put them in the wild, they starve. Personally, we taught our little cubs that if they get really hungry, they can always kill and eat a bag of Ramen noodles. They’ve gotten pretty good at it too. David, GypsyNester.com Read Similar LifeTwo Stories:Find More By Clicking On These Links:Actions »
|
|||
|   |   |   |   |
|
|
Amen, Brother!!
Whew, what a relief! I've been harboring quite a bit of guilt about not being crestfallen at the prospect of an empty nest.
Seems like every parent wants to commiserate about how tough it is leading up to or after the break. No doubt it's tough. This is the part of the ugly side of parenting that you can't fully understand until you're in it...sort of like having your belly button pop out while pregnant. Too hard to describe.
Honestly, I'm counting down with excitement for me and my children. What better than to all be navigating this transition together yet in our own ways. I suspect I'll come to respect my kids more than I do now because of it.
And, heck, it's time for me to have some fun, to explore and be adventurous. We've told our kids that one year after the last goes off to college we're moving to California to start our second lives.
So, call me a proud Gypsy Nester!
Dina Marriage Maven Middle age marriage doesn't have to suck...Re-invent it! This Marriage Thing
This Marriage Thing
OMG thanks. Exactly what I needed when I needed it.
You're a proud GypsyNester!
You said to call you one, so I did...but seriously, I'm glad to see there are some of us out here that are seeing things this way. It doesn't mean we don't love and miss our kids, it means we want them to have a great life out there on their own while we do too. Please join us on the journey at www.gypsynester.com
Why Empty Nest depression?
This, I don't get at all. Our kids (2 daughters) have been gone for about five years. (Of course, we have four Shelties and three cats. It's not exactly quiet around here.)
We have found our pace of life to be slower than it used to be, for which we are grateful. Our girls, their spouses, the grandkids (3! Am I really that old...?) live about 1,000 miles away. We wish we could see them more often, but we moved out here when I was working for a now-defunct airline. Getting cut off like this wasn't in the plan.
We aren't crestfallen, but we are a bit lonesome for our kids. Due to other issues, we haven't done as much as we would like to since the kids went out on their own. We hope to change that, but with the economic mess it's hard to see very far ahead. We don't have the resources to move back to the Midwest where the kids are, for example. For now, Gypsy Nesters just isn't in the cards. There is still time, though...
"I want to be the person my dogs think I am."
Post new comment