I always thought we would go to the extreme land of Las Vegas, see a glitzy show, play 21, toast her with a mixed
drink, watch the people and the night lights as we walked from casino to casino, but she is studying
abroad.
Checklist:
Passport
Visa
Xerox copies of important documents to keep at home and to put in
different places while you are traveling abroad
Emergency numbers of the study abroad program and for your
child to have with them
Travel with the coins needed for that country , so you can get what you need as soon
as you land, like a bus, cab, snack.
Find out the charges to use ATM when in another
country.
Perscriptions and medicine like Pepto Bismol, plan ahead
Wipes and Kleenex
Check
what you need to bring for the housing. Some want you to bring your own towels
Bring a host gift that has
something to do with your home town.
Photos
Inspiring quotations
Planner or small
calendar
Tuck love notes in your child
All of us have a story to tell ourselves.. Sometimes we see the dark side, the negative side of our perceptions and
other times we see the light and positive expressions.
I believe both sides need writing release
time.
The blank page might be numbing, but just begin with any thing. a word, a doodle, a
line.
You can let it flow, spontaneously. You don
by Jennifer | submitted on January 16, 2006
I am tired. I don’t think I realized for years, how tired I am. Yes, my family and best job ever , called parenting, energized and fulfilled me, but I am tired.
My two kids have left the parent den. They are in college and on their way to freedom and satisfaction.
My career has been demanding, high powered, successful, and definitely more than a 40 hour week. I am good at it and that is rewarding. I also made a lot of money and am not afraid to say it. You know we were taught to never ask or talk about how much money people make!”
I am still tired. I know the good life and the bad life. I am 53, healthy, blessed with good looks and mostly blessed with friends and family who care for me and let me care for them. My husband is a good friend. We are financially ok at this time of life. We still love and like hanging out together.
I am still tired, tired of outputting myself. I don’t think I knew it until after these last holidays when all the kids, family, friends, and traditions took my presents and smiles. I could have said” no” more often. I could have asked for help more often. I like doing it on my own and yes at times I am controlling. That doesn’t sound good to me, but true at times.
I am not blaming them. I am finally realizing in my empty nest that I am feeling empty.
In reality this is a good thing because now I know me in a new way. My girlfriend said it so well. “Well dear friend, you have stripped yourself in front of a mirror that you never even knew was in the hallway of your house.. I remember when you hung the mirror after you happily bought it at a flea market, but I don’t think you ever looked at it after it was hung.””
She is so honest in her poetic metaphors. I just love her!
I wonder how many other empty nesters felt the mirror crack, so to speak.
I am young and hopeful, but still tired. Can I slow myself down in this transition or will my habits of life that filled me, win out and launch me into actions, again?”
How long do I get too feel tired and how do I know what I need? I knew the old me, but who is this with the mirror on the floor?”
I wasn’t going to email this story of mine, but truth is, I wonder how other empty nesters see themselves in their reflection of the life they are living? That sounds so heavy and I don’t mean it that way. I mean to giggle, but I am too tired.
My son called and I didn’t even pick up. That is a giggle. Who am I in the mirror? Can you tell me true. Who am I in the mirror that use to do and do?
I think I’ll sleep and in that dark no light will follow me I think I will sleep and let that dark comfort me to simply be . I know my eyes will open but will they see the same? I know I need to rest and no one cares if I am not at my best. I know love because I give it away, but not on this day. I am too tired.
Call me another day to play and if I am not too tired, let’s dance. You can lead!”
Resting under the cozy blue blankets with pops from firewood, moving over the cracked down mirror once smiling at a flea market.
by Susan | submitted on January 14, 2006
They say there is no reality to preparing for your baby and now there is no reality to having your baby leave home By reality I mean nothing really makes sense. I am a single parent, divorced and have read the books on the shelves about parenting. I didn’t really find any that spoke to me about empty nest. I am trying to figure out that word ME…It has been some years even though I work and love my life ,that it is ME, now.
I don’t like the mornings when I just make breakfast for one and even worse are the dinners where I am just not comfortable eating in a caf
Empty Nest Support is a welcoming harbor and a place to build a larger community for each other. I believe we write
because we are all wanting to make a connection, know who we are, and unfold what we are needing, feeling and
thinking.
Sometimes we connect with
by Babette Freed | submitted on January 3, 2006
I awoke the other night, shouting, “Get off my toilet , I picked that beige bowl out. I searched plumbing stores to find it, and now you are sitting on my seat. I cleaned the inside diligently – get off- YOU CAN”T HAVE It.”
Last week I dreamed I took my red broom and poked her in the stomach, hit her over the head and pushed her out my rear door. “This is my home, get out!”
But it wasn’t my home anymore – we had sold it.
The old decaying New York apple tree is being replaced by a tall stately Florida palm. The paradise I once only envisioned was now touchable. My hand stroked the huge palm tree beneath our bedroom window. The roughness imprinted my dream with reality.
My husband, Mel and I have finally discovered peace, serenity. When we chose the location for our new home we jokingly called it plot 49. “No,” chuckled our salesman ” it’s lot 49.”
But to us it was plot 49, our heaven.
How could we leave 37 years of accumulations? Birthday cards, poems, notes from our children’s teachers, and even a few congratulation certificates for us, now had to be discarded.
“All this trash,” my 35 year old son scorned as I flipped through the letters Mel sent when he was in the Korean War. To me, rereading my three sons’ letters from college expanding on political issues or describing their new love, could never be considered trash.
How does a depression era mom suddenly throw out her sons’ trophies or their Rembrandts from kindergarten we had framed – or my bridal gown.
How does this mom who would rather make pot roast than have her nails manicured, suddenly discard her baton. “Let them compose their own music, play their own songs,” my husband urged me.
But it wasn’t that simple. Nightmares set in, I cried. I tried to
Babette Freed Page 2
picture my new lovely home in a more relaxed climate, but my Seder plate and Yom Kippur break-fast kept creeping in.
What had I done? The baton I wanted to pass on kept sticking to my wrinkled fingers, like the putty we used to seal the cracks on our worn out windows. The soft music I wanted my children to compose became the sounds of percussion drums.
My grandson’s big blue tearful eyes said it all. “Grams, do you like your friends in Florida better than me? Where will we have Seder? My mom’s table isn’t big enough.” Or, “why didn’t you tell me gramps needed help with the house? I would have come over and
raked the leaves.”
How can a 66 year old grandma answer? I couldn’t. I begged my husband to repurchase our home. He was furious, “For a few dinners a year, give up our chance for a slower, easier life, clean air. What about us? How many more years do we have? Honey this is our chance – no more half dormers {when we expanded our small cape cod home we could only afford half dormers). No more choosing the floor coverings because they were on sale. With the money we receive from selling up north, we can buy our dream home. Honey, I always wanted a garage, we can now afford a double one.”
But was it the material comforts that made him want to move or-
“When do we go dancing up north,” Mel questioned me. “Or go to a movie where the theater has soft plush velvet seats without chewing gum. When do we put on formal clothes, go to a party, or drive to the opera without the hassle of the Manhattan traffic? Honey, the kids will write their own scripts and play the parts they choose. Let them.”
My palm trees now became weeping willows and I became extremely depressed. My doctor laughed, “Oh all you women are alike, you come in here crying when you sell. You’ll get over it. Stop driving your husbands nuts. They’ll get a heart attack and then what. Here’s a prescription for some tranquilizers.”
But what about us, aren’t women important. What about our feelings. How does someone cope with this loss. It’s real, and hurts hard.
No one wanted to hear me. “You should be thankful you can afford this.” Friends who were not moving couldn’t understand. “Stop your whining, you aren’t going to a shelter for the homeless.” I felt like I was eating chocolate cake and complaining that there was no whipped cream.
Babette Freed Page 3
I started to count the hours I spent in my kitchen, cleaning my bathroom, cooking dinners. I counted the hours my husband was actually inside the house. He probably had spent more time, or at least equal time in his office than in our home. I realized it”
probably had been harder for him to leave his job. How could he understand my feelings?
I decided to expose my dreams or lack of dreams, my nightmares.
I timidly questioned other women who had relocated. It seemed like they had been waiting for my questions. Waiting for someone to inquire how they felt. No one had ever asked.
Women began to bare their hearts like lifting a bandage and exposing a deep wound. “It took time for us to adjust, there is no one out there to talk to.” So now lets talk-“
“Cleaning my basement,” Doris laughed, “You could have chosen between becoming a doctor, lawyer or mechanic. All my kids text books, thrown out. I must have shipped $3,000 worth of memories to my children in Seattle, and then we shipped twelve cartons more.
Another friend just answered,”horrendous.”
Her granddaughter had asked her,” Who will make the latkes? Who will light the Chanukah Menora?”
Gilda hugged me, “The only thing that saved me was to buy a little place to hang my hat. My daughter’s home was small. No closets for my clothes. What was I supposed to do, come in layers? Nightgown, underwear, rinse, wash and put them on again.” She hugged me tighter, ” Find something, somewhere, Bobbie, close to the grand kids. You must. Reassure them, you will not leave them.”
“It took me two years to pass my house. To say good bye to it, and realize that I don’t live here any more.” Joan told me. “My lantern that lit up the driveway for thirty two years was now cracked and the light was out.”
She had sobbed to her husband, “It’s not my house, let’s go home.”
“I get airplane tickets often,” confessed Shirley.
Nancy chimed, “I go up and bring them down. Cost me a lot, but it’s the money we were leaving them that I’m spending.”
Babette Freed Page 4
“Every time I go to a motel instead of staying with my daughter in law, I say, Thank you kids for paying.” Gloria smiled, “After all it is coming out of their inheritance.”
Jane whispered, ” Between tears, she asked her husband, “Where will our grand kids play now?”
Casually, he responded, “in the park.”
Are men really from Mars, are we really from Venus?”
Before we left New York, Natalie called from Manhattan, “Bobbie, I’m coming over this afternoon. Murray and I will join you and Mel for dinner tonight. But this afternoon we’re cleaning out your clothes closet. We’ll make packages for the Yeshiva, your long dresses will go to the orthodox women. I’ll help. Remember I moved from our home of forty years last year . I promised myself I would never allow a friend to go through sorting her clothes alone.”
Nat came and we laughed. “Look how thin I once was!” My brocade dress, size seven for Gary’s Bar Mitzvah stared at me as if it was asking for a new home. My wool hats, coats, scarfs all went to the Chabad. Without Natalie a piece of my heart would have been discarded between my fur lined leather gloves.
Our cousins called,”We’re coming up for a few days to pack your breakables. Help you dispose of things. Remember we just did it last year – let us help.”
The support team was superb, A friend of thirty years called, “Happy New Year. So when you getting down here ? I need my big sister.”
The calls kept coming from Florida. And the calls from our friends in New York, “We’re watching you, we’re scared. Not ready yet, but ….” And then the deep pause on the phone.
How do I answer my grandson, Evan? “No, I don’t like my friends better than you. You are my world, but you must have your interests. You are the brig
ht star in my sky, I am your background. I will always be there for you, no matter where I am, on this earth or in heaven.”
But no longer am I there to help with the homework, or “Ah” over a good grade. Is that cocktail party more important than the joy of seeing my grandson run to show me his A on a test?”
My sons said, “You’re selfish, mom, to want to keep the house. How can you allow Dad to worry about the water pipes freezing, or pruning the trees? What if he got a heart attack or stroke? You”
Babette Freed Page 5
know your cousin died just last week, pruning his trees.”
But what about my feelings?
I had attended seminars on how to sell your home. The real estate agents, bankers, lawyers and architects gave convincing speeches, but no one ever discussed the emotional aspect.
Perhaps a university could take a survey, a questionnaire to gramps and grams rating the pleasurable moments of their graying”
years. Where would tennis and golf rank verses making chocolate cookies for the school Grandparents Day?
Are men really from Mars, are we from Venus?”
We are leaving for Florida. The tears have stopped, but the nightmares haven’t. As we pay the toll exiting the Florida Turnpike, perhaps they should issue invitations to a grandmothers meeting- where we can just talk about our anxieties.
Our Long Island homes were tired homes. They needed new life. The lawns were thirsty for someone who preferred refreshing them instead of playing tennis. The ping pong table invited new players.
But my kitchen still beckoned me to make Passover dinner. I am not ready to relinquish my Seder Plate. Sure, I’ll have gefilte fish for my friends in my shiny new kitchen but without my grandchildren arguing over who will read the four questions first, it will never be My Passover dinner.
Unless, we put everything in a freezer chest, including my broken heart, and bring it back to my children up north-“
If their baton is synchronized with ours-
And they are composing similar melodies to the ones we so diligently taught them. Hoping that one day the Jewish Heritage we so strongly hold dear to us will become part of their music.
I believe this year is going to be full of opportunities to: believe you can, to risk, to say I am sorry and I need you to
I was talking with a sad mother today who was missing her son who got married. She reminisced about past holidays
of stringing the garland popcorn, pre-school gifts he made her, like the hand print in clay, school day projects of salt
maps, and those freezing football games of jumping up and down, always praying he wouldn
Empty nest had an advantage today, quiet and no other person
The holidays have tapped on our door and empty time is placed in the basement.
I still have my intention
to engage in a creative force. I feel the chaos from my to-do list, the shopping, the events to schedule, the want to
bring joy and beauty to my home, and keeping creativity flowing.
Right now, my creativity is expressed
through writing. I am passionate about desires, ways to fulfillment, acceptance, creativity, wildness, connectedness,
paradoxes, and perspective. I have a huge curiosity about communication styles and happiness. I like change. I want
to explore every nook and cranny about life. I wonder about entering elder hood. I wonder about behaviors we do. I
wonder about the bigger picture.
I believe all creativity is of value even if no one sees it or likes it, but
me. It engages me in new ways and leads me. It is a surrender and satisfaction. It is mine and not. Creativity gives me
a relationship with me that is different than with another person.
I just need to show up with my blank
page, be honest, and let it flow.
Sometimes, I say,
Natalie Caine, M.A. natalie@lifeintransition.org