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Life-cycle changes

This morning, as I was neutrally sipping my tea, a thought occurred to me. I've officially just become one of those 'empty nesters'. Apparently, this engenders some kind of cataclysmic crisis in most NT mothers. You see, my daughter just graduated from her flight attendant training & is now on the flight schedule & officially employed by Air Canada. This morning, with her car packed with stuff, she departed for her new home in Toronto. She'll be sharing a place with another flight attendant from her class.

When your last child moves out, you're allegedly supposed to contemplate the shift in life from being parents of kids to being parents of real grown-ups. I'm supposed to be thinking about the move towards grand-children, retirement & becoming a senior citizen. I should be a mess of tears, sentimentality, memories & other bitter-sweet fare. Yet here I am, sipping a fruity home-made herbal tea, eating apple/caramel cake & hanging out here. They say, "It will hit you later." Uhhh...I doubt it. I don't even have the hardware upon which to run that kind of software!

This is definitely a manifestation of the way Asperger's has made me different. A fellow Aspie at the other extreme of the emotional spectrum might be in an anxiety attack/melt-down state. A NT mom goes through all that stuff I mentioned above. I've been surfing the web reading blogs by new empty nester mothers & most of them go through a whole lot of emotional rigmarole I see no purpose for. Seems almost like a bizarre form of self-torture! All that angst & for what? What will it change? If all that belly-aching could turn back the clock, would it be for the better? Whose interests would forcing your 20 something year old kids to remain under your tutelage serve?

In our case, our youngest will be back for a few days in about 10 days. Flight attendants work a maximum of 70 hours/month. I prefer this to her original idea of becoming a cop: she isn't an emotionally tough person & seeing what cops have to see & deal with on a regular basis would've proven to be too much for her at this stage in her life. Maybe closer to age 30, but this is a decision for a future date: not now. Meanwhile, I'll keep sipping tea, eating cake, hanging out here, doing the wash & the floors & the dogs. Right now, the empty nest means I've inherited the full-time responsibility for a humongous Great Dane who seems to need to go out & poop as often as most people blink.

Comments

I'm not a mom but I suspect the reason why so many moms go through the empty-nest syndrome is that they have invested so much into their identities as wives and mothers that they have no sense of self. I've never heard of a man going through this.

It's sort of like losing a job that you've spent your whole life at. Unless you've developed other interests then it is going to hit you hard. I enjoy my job and yes, I'll admit that if I went in to work and was told that they no longer needed me, it would not be easy. But my crisis would be more centered around financial issues rather than identity issues. Because I wear many hats.

Actually I think your attitude is far more healthy than the mothers that fall apart. Children are meant to grow up and go out in the world; if they succeed, then that means we've done our job as parents. Now it is time to move on and take our relationships to new dimensions.
 
I agree, Spinning Compass. I think it has more to do with the way these women see themselves than the fact that their kids have grown into adulthood. My father was one such retiree for whom his career was his identity. Getting up in the morning & having nothing in particular to do & nowhere in particular to go left him lost & confused. He became doddery & turned into an old man with shocking speed.

It would never have occurred to me to confuse who I am as a human being to what I do. What happens to many men when it comes to their career is what happens to many women when it comes to motherhood: it becomes who they are. I've heard many women say, "My children are my life!" & they can be perceived as oh so dedicated & loving. I find this to be somewhat of a distortion: something unhealthy. The 2 kids I had are my children BUT they have their own lives. I have no business blurring the boundaries between who they are & who I am. I have no business living vicariously through them.

Another thing I've seen fathers do with sons & mothers do with daughters is to pressure their kids to live the life they never got to live or to relive their experiences. Boys who hate team sports are often pushed by macho over-zealous fathers to play football because when they were kids, they played it. Ironically, my own daughter tried many of the activities I'd tried as a kid. She tried jazz ballet, disliked it & quit after a couple of years (so had I). I never pushed her into trying out for or getting into anything whatsoever. Too many mothers 'invest' in their daughters: seeing them dolled up in frills & ringlets, seeing them in a ballet tutu, imagining what they'll look like at the prom or on their wedding day...

We need to remember that this is THEIR lives & not ours. My daughter went to her prom dinner with a bunch of friends, skipped the dance thingy (le bal des finissants here) altogether & went club-hopping with her cronies. They had a grand time of it. As for a wedding, she doesn't want a husband & kids: she wants to build her career, have guys she dates BUT none whose meals she has to cook or whose abiding presence she has to endure. She has said that one day she may adopt. These decisions must be entirely her own because SHE is the one who will be permanently affected by the consequences. I made my choices, she gets to make hers: un-pressured & un-coerced. Advice or opinions come only when she asks for them.

As for my son, he one day wants a wife & a hoard of kids. He's having a difficult time hammering out what he ultimately wants to do but he has many college credits in maths & sciences. I've told him not to rush & make the decision that it right for himself. Too many young people plough through & embark onto a set career path only to discover after 4 long years & tens of thousands of dollars, that they hate what they're doing & feel trapped! What I've advised him to do is to wait until he has that career set & stabilized BEFORE marrying some young woman & saddling yourself & her with a bunch of kids you can't afford.
 

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