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Weekly
Meditation For Busy Parents
TRY
A LITTLE EMPTINESS
By
Melissa Gaskill
American Way (American Airlines Inflight Magazine) 2004
Shipping the kids off to school marks a danger zone for your marriage but it's
possible to make these your best years yet. When your kids are in the last years
of high school, life seems a whirlwind of homework, extracurricular activities,
community service projects, ACT and SAT prep and testing, college visits and applications,
and scholarship meetings. But somewhere in the midst of this frenzy, it hits you
the kids are leaving. The nest will be empty. As far as life changes go, this
is a big one. It's like finding yourself unemployed, or, worse, fired. A lot of
time, love, and effort went into those offspring, and suddenly the hands-on, daily
part of the job is over. You canšt help feeling a little sad and lonely, and no
matter how well the kids turned out, you probably have some regrets. But your
toughest assignment wonšt be adjusting to missing the kids. Itšll be adjusting
to your marriage.
Couples realize they've let their lives revolve around
the children, and once they're gone, the big question is, Now what? All of a sudden
the two of you are sitting there thinking, OWhat do we talk about?says Ingrid
Melrose of Houston, whose youngest child recently started college. You have to
readjust to having conversations with your spouse. Chances are, family activities
revolved around the kids, too. Remember the last time you went out as a couple,
just for fun? No? You're not alone.
Your marriage has been child-centered,
and one of the big challenges is to go from that child focus to a partner focus,
points out Claudia Arp, marriage educator and coauthor of Empty Nesting and The
Second Half of Marriage. Issues you think are long buried resurface. It's easy
to be lonely and stressed out. An empty nest is a time of particular danger for
an affair. Without intentional focus on the marriage, empty nesters may find they
have no reason to stay together. The overall U.S. divorce rate has declined slightly,
but couples married 30-plus years are splitting up 6 percent more often. Reason?
The empty nest. I've seen friends who were totally wrapped up with their children
and found they didn't have much in common and no outside interests or commitments,
says Cal Chaney, general counsel for a physician's group in Dallas and parent
of two college-age sons. Some of those marriages break up. But fortunately, the
empty nest also has the potential to be one of the best times of married life.
You forget in 20 years what it is like to choose what you want to do every night,
says Audrey Jackson, mother of three sons in college. We can cook what we like
or go out to dinner if we feel like it. Our weekends are free to do what we want.
With a little preparation and planning, you can enjoy your empty nest,
too. Stare Into The Emptiness As your kids prep for college, you need to do some
of your own prepping and you shouldnšt wait until they've moved into the dorm.
Make a list of the positive and negative aspects of your soon-to-be empty nest.
Write down your personal interests besides your children and set goals for this
next stage of life. List the things youšll never do and need to let go of and
things you want to do when the kids are gone. Don't be completely realistic here,
and do include things you want to do with your partner. Dr. Clare Chaney, for
example, plans to accompany Cal to some of the many conferences he attends, and
they're booking a cruise with old college friends. The idea is to anticipate the
void your kids will leave and find ways to fill it, now.
If you arenšt
working, consider a part-time job or make plans to go back to school (just not
the same one your children will attend!). If youšre working full time, volunteer,
pick up an old hobby, or find a new one to take the place of all those kid-related
activities. And donšt forget the physical void: Make plans for the space in your
home that will be freed up. You don't have to make the kid's rooms unrecognizable,
but you can change things a bit. Think about downsizing into a smaller house.
Or think about filling the space with a new pet. It's positively uncanny how many
couples do this, consciously or unconsciously giving themselves something new
to take care of. Just be sure you both want to do this, and find a good pet sitter
so you won't be tied down.
Accentuate the positive you aren't losing
a teenager, you're gaining a bathroom! And plenty of hot water. Clean towels.
The food you like in the fridge (food in the fridge, period!). The television
show you like to watch. You get the idea. If you think you want to spend as much
time as possible with your teenager after all, he'll be gone soon consider that
your teenager probably wants to spend less time with you. That's healthy.
Disengaging is a two-way street, and parents who don't do their part end
up having more of a problem with their adult children, warns Sheri Stritof, coauthor
of The Everything Great Marriage Book. Instead, focus on your friends and start
spending more time with your partner. The kids may be leaving, but you'll be spending
the rest of your life (you hope) with your partner. The greatest predictor of
marital success is the level of friendship, Arp says, and one way to build that
friendship is by going out on dates. So take dance lessons. Go out to dinner with
another couple (this will help you talk about things other than the kids). Plan
a parents-only vacation. Working on the senior prom with a group of other moms
helped Clare Chaney let go of her son, and she enjoyed the bonds formed with other
senior parents.
After The Fall
Once your kid actually leaves,
put your plans into action. Have a party to celebrate. If you drop a child off
at college, you might not want to go straight home to an empty house take a few
days at the beach to ease the transition. On the other hand, if you're exhausted,
go straight home and sleep for a few days, then take a trip. When you get back,
re-energize your love life. If you don't remember what that is, check Arp's latest
book, Great Dates for Empty Nesters, for ideas. To feel linked to your child's
new life, join the parents association at your child's college.
That
was one of the best things that happened to us, says Mary Anne Barber, previous
co-chair of the University of Texas Parents Association. Getting involved with
the college and meeting other parents who are in the same boat helped with the
empty nest. One of the things I had missed the most was the interaction with parents
of kids who were in school with mine. Ask the Dean of Students' office at your
child's college about parent orientations and publications for parents. And don't
forget to let yourself grieve. Go ahead and cry. Talk about your child and all
the things you remember and what you'll miss. To give yourself a tangible event
to anticipate, make arrangements for future time with your college student, like
his trip home for the holidays or a family getaway during the summer. Most of
all, enjoy yourselves.
We think this is the best stage of marriage, says
Arp. We moved. We're traveling more and rediscovering things we liked to do before
the kids came along, like playing tennis. We're having a blast. You can, too.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MELISSA GASKILL, a freelance writer based in Austin, Texas, writes a weekly parenting
column for the Austin American-Statesman and contributes to magazines such as
Family Fun. David and Claudia Arp will present and exhibit at the 2005 Smart Marriages
Conference. See you there!
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