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What I wish I knew about Empty Nesting

January 8, 2023 by JanSmith

An early Summer morning and a chance to walk and talk with a group of women along the beach. A quiet circle as each woman introduces themselves and an Acknowledgement of Country is spoken to ground us in connection with the traditional owners of the land we meet on.

As the walk begins the women gather into groups of two or more heading south along the sand to our designated turning point. The painted wooden Kookaburra on a pole. This New Year is bringing new faces to the group. Women who have found the courage to join the regular Sunday gathering.

I join several conversations and a theme emerges. Quite a few of these women are in the throws of empty nesting. Their children about to leave for university or away from our community. Others I speak to are not quite at that stage and still parenting teenage children. Yet they see a time ahead when their days of active mothering will gradually come to an end.

Photo by Ankur Dutta on Unsplash

The years of bringing up our children go so quickly. During parenting we are in constant demand. Some of the women today feel that it is one of the most challenging and rewarding roles they’ve experienced. When we are immersed in it we have a definite identity and responsibility. From the moment we are handed our first child we are changed forever.

Yet there comes a time when our children become independent of us. Leading their own separate lives. Possibly creating their own families. It’s a time where rather than being a central character, we play a bit part in their lives. It’s a time of shedding that ‘mother’ role, stepping back from nurturing them as children and re-establishing our own identity. It feels uncomfortable and if not consciously thought about and prepared for it can be a shock to the system. It can feel like a grief process until we feel a sense of acceptance and contentment with life moving forward.

The biggest change for me as a mum was realizing I needed to put someone else before me. Now the hardest part about the empty nest is learning to put myself first.

Kim Alexis

You are prepared

Life has equipped us for this transition. As we hand over our little ones to their teachers on the first day of kindergarten. Then watch them progress from primary to high school. There are strategies we have used to help both our children and ourselves embrace change and engage with it effectively. Communicating what the next step may look like. Visiting the new environment so it doesn’t feel so strange. Rehearsing the practical skills that will support them to independently navigate their way. Listening to concerns and together coming up with strategies to support them.

Each little transition that we’ve experienced with them helps us let go that bit more. Giving them confidence to mature and gain independence. We won’t be able to impart all the learning. There will be skills and life lessons to learn as they navigate young adulthood. Our role increasingly becomes one of support from a healthy distance.

It’s also important for us to prepare ourselves for this change. Begin to find connections and activities outside the realm of work and family. Not an easy task when lives are busy.

  • Perhaps find one thing you particularly enjoy and regularly fit it into your schedule.
  • Make increasing opportunity for ‘me time’ so you can nurture your own needs.
  • Have valuable family time, but particularly toward the later teenage years spend more time apart. Get a physical sense of them not being around before they move away.
  • Give yourself compassion when you feel saddened by the closing of this chapter. Begin to imagine the possibilities beyond parenting. The next stage of your own life.

Create a Ritual

Transitions call for ceremony. A time to reflect on the life phase that is ending for both your child and yourself. To honour the energy you have put into the role and to acknowledge the results of your years of mothering. Here are some possibilities.

  • You might write a letter to your child.
  • Have a specific dinner together to honour new beginnings. Share family memories and stories of their growing years.
  • Find a special gift to signify the love you share.
  • Take a holiday together.

Whatever you plan, use the ritual as a positive and affirming time. You’ll miss them yet be proud of who they have grown up to be.

There is life beyond

As with all transitions it will feel awkward and new. Just as it was at the beginning of motherhood, moving into a new home or starting at a new workplace. There is no rush. Once your children have empty nested you are entering a new phase of life. Reconnecting with the woman you are now. Reconnecting in your relationships with your partner and friends. Reconnecting with your purpose moving forward.

Its also a time to embrace new activities and connections. It has been a long time since you could focus on yourself. If you are working, it may be a time to take on more challenge or responsibility. You may want to do additional formal or informal learning. It can also be a time for creativity, travel and following your passions. A time to focus on your own self-care and physical well-being.

Over time a different relationship develops with our children. They may partner and have children of their own. The desire to be a grandparent can be strong but is a role that is best eased into and navigated sensitively and in a balanced way.

Be flexible in what you are willing to take on as your own life evolves. Its so easy to step back into nurturing forgetting how much energy is required to care for babies and young children. Avoid caring for grandchildren becoming an ongoing expectation or burden. Instead focus on the unique role and relationship you can create in their lives.

Empty nesting is the culmination of all our hard work as parents. It fits neatly into the flow of many ongoing transitions we make in life. Preparing for it, acknowledging it and planning for a life beyond are crucial for making this a smooth process.

More reading on this topic: –

Beyond the Nest

Four Inner Resources for Empty Nest Parents

What I wish I knew about Parenthood

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I Feel Like a Local

December 11, 2022 by JanSmith

Sitting together on a picnic rug by the river. A group of local women gathered to celebrate their Christmas Party. An outdoor Escape Room team challenge followed by a beautiful gathering around food and bubbles. A perfect way to end our year of connection.

The conversation turns to how long each of us have been living in our coastal community. The answers varied from only a few months to several years. For me, its been twenty years living here. We moved from the country when our last child finished school. Doing a ‘sea change’ without our children.

‘Well, you’re a local’ was the response of one of the women. A badge of honour that seems to be only conferred to those who have lived here all of their lives or at least several decades. I realized yes that finally I did feel like a local, but it’s been a long journey towards that realization.

Photo by Evangelina Silina on Unsplash

I am a country girl, through and through. Growing up in a town where my grandparents were among the first pioneering families to settle. My roots are deep in the red dirt of this farming community. I spent my childhood growing up there. When you are embedded in a community like that people know you based on your family and school connections. You are someone’s granddaughter, daughter, sister, school mate or friend.

When we returned to the community as a family in the early 90’s my children would always be surprised that it took so long to walk the main street. Regularly stopping to chat with people who knew me even though I had moved away in my late teens to university. For me, slipping back into my childhood community as an adult was easy.

Not so easy for my husband who had grown up on the outskirts of a major city. For him the connections were harder to make and mainly came through work and sport. Eventually the yearning for a more coastal lifestyle beckoned. We found a home near the beach and within eighteen months had made the transition to the seaside community we now live in.

We still retained work commitments with our country business. Travelling monthly back to visit. Most of the time my husband could work from home when technology finally allowed the possibility. He loved the new compromise and quickly settled into local life. For me, the trips back were an opportunity to catch up with our now young adult children. Eventually our first grandchild came along and the emotional pull back to the country began for me.

Over the ensuing years I’ve had several ‘escapes’ back to the country. I lived several years back in the community during the last years of my father’s life. Finding my very last teaching role while supporting my sister with dad’s care. I also returned during the recent Covid years to help our children with childcare and home schooling our grandchildren. Each time I felt the emotional priority of my decisions outweighed the more comfortable, retired existence we had created.

What have I learnt about making a ‘Seachange’/’Treechange’?

You broaden your connections and life experience by moving community.

When you have lived in the same place all of your life you maintain existing connections over a long period of time. A wonderful thing but something that also may hinder you meeting new people. Moving to somewhere where you know very few people can be daunting. It can also be an opportunity to expand your friendship network. Meeting people from differing backgrounds and life experiences.

Establish your own friendships and activities separate to your family.

This is a big one if you move to be closer to your adult children and their families. Keeping your family connections as your main locus of attention can hinder meeting others and engaging with a new community. Maintain separate lives within the same geographic area to help keep relationships harmonious with your extended family. When you do get together you will have some interesting experiences to share about your lives.

Use your interests and passions to form connections with your new community.

The things we enjoy doing are highly transferable. Use your interests and passions to find groups within your new community. Some groups may specifically aim to welcome new residents. Join community events and activities. Seek out information about what’s on in your new community.

Be kind to yourself in the transition, however long it takes.

You may fall in love with your new location immediately. Alternatively, like me, it may take a long time to feel settled and content. Accept however you feel and try not to be discouraged and regretful of your decision. Its common to feel a sense of ‘what have I done’ at moments of transition. To pine for the familiar of your previous location. To miss friends and activities you enjoyed. Resist the temptation to compare as each community has its own unique offerings. Just allow yourself the time to discover what your new location has to offer.

Moving location can fill us with a mix of emotions. Our sense of stability can be replaced by a sense of disconnection from the familiar. We may regret our decision. Change is challenging. Give yourself time. You may be surprised to find that, like me, you eventually feel like a local. Content and emotionally connected to a new community of people. It’s taken a while, but it’s been worth it.

What has been your experience of moving to a different geographic location? Comment below.

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Finding Ourselves in our Stories

September 16, 2022 by JanSmith

Words are powerful yet they are only a small part of our communication with others. The tone with which we speak shares our emotions. The perspective of what we have to say shows the processing of our internal thoughts. Our body language – facial expressions, posture, gestures and eye movement, can support what we are saying or convey an entirely different message altogether.

The words we express are only part of our internal dialogue. At times we find it hard to find just the ‘right’ words to express our opinions, thoughts and feelings. When we do, our words can be misconstrued by the recipient.  It’s not an easy task to communicate effectively with others.

Yet communication is a powerful tool. For learning, confidence, connection, reflection and healing. I’m using my previous blog posts to explore this topic. Hopefully you will find a few strategies and insights to ponder. If you wish to read further there are links below to the full blogs.

Photo by Joanna Kosinska on Unsplash

The Power of our own Life Story

By the time we reach the third trimester of life, a term defined by author of Smart, Stupid & Sixty Nigel Marsh, much has happened. There are a myriad of experiences to draw meaning from. Lessons learnt from both the good and the bad, the expected and the ones we didn’t see come from ‘left field’. We may feel our story is unimportant or fairly mundane yet in reflection we have the opportunity to explore its richness and find wisdom that’s valuable for both ourselves and others.

Methodically thinking back over parts of our lives can allow for reflection and healing. From the present day perspective it is possible to see past events within a bigger framework of life as a whole. There is the possibility for acceptance and forgiveness for what we remember. Its also possible to see how a particular incident has impacted our lives over time. Even where trauma has been involved, the potential for growth is more likely than us remaining unable to move forward in our lives. (Linda Graham – Resilience expert and author of Bouncing Back).

My own journey of reflection has allowed me to find my voice and gain powerful insight on past events and their impact. My tool of choice has been to write my thoughts within the framework of a blog. There are also other creative means such as poetry, song writing, podcasting, memoir and journalling.

Read more ….

Finding my voice

The Power of our Story

“Humans are the only species that share stories. We’d be lost without them. With them, we find ourselves.”

Barbara Fulton Singer/Actor (Come from Away).

The Courage to Speak Up

Communication is easy when we agree with the views of the other person. We can reinforce each other’s perspective and feel a real sense of connection. The difficulty comes when we see life differently to someone else. In a sense our stories about life collide.

It takes a level of determination and courage to express our own unique point of view. To delve into disagreement rather than maintain an uncomfortable peace. A healthy level of conflict can help clear the air and open up increased respect for the differing needs and perspectives of each other. Its opposite can lead to giving and receiving silent treatment from others. Something detrimental to relationships if left unchecked. Read more in this article by Bernard Golden Ph.D.

Important conversations require some careful planning. Its important to first clarify your own viewpoint. Introduce the possibility of a conversation. You could start with ‘I’ve been thinking about … lately. Do you mind if we set aside a time to chat about it? This gives the other person time to reflect on their own thoughts on the subject. When you’ve created a space for the discussion take your time as things can feel emotionally uncomfortable. It’s also important to avoid distractions.

We can go through life sitting on the sidelines. Feeling our opinions are not valuable or appreciated by others. Increasingly feeling our needs and priorities remain unmet. It takes confidence to find our voice, particularly if we put the fear of how others will react before our own need for expression. Imagine the possibilities of being vulnerable enough to share your opinions more openly. Being your best advocate and the reward of finding your deeper, more authentic, and less censored sense of self.

Read more ….

Sharing our version of the story

Having difficult Conversations

Failing to Speak up in Life

Life begins at the end of your comfort zone.’

Neale Donald Walsch

Using Emotional Intelligence when we communicate

During our lives we are developing knowledge about our world. Emotional intelligence is the ability to understand and manage our own emotions and those of the people around us. When someone has a high degree of emotional intelligence: – they know what they are feeling, what their emotions mean and how they affect others. There is a rich awareness in their story about life.

The skill set for emotional intelligence includes self-awareness, self-management of our own emotions, empathy for others and sound relationships (the heart skills of inspiring and motivating others and effectively managing conflict).

Emotional Intelligence can be improved on with effort and understanding. It is a work in progress, as skills such as conflict resolution may always remain difficult for us in our professional and personal lives.

Read more …

Communicating with Emotional Intelligence

Leaving a Legacy through our words and stories

When we type words on our devices they have a uniformity. We can choose a particular font to use yet it is not uniquely ours. One thing that is often treasured by others is our handwritten messages to them. Stored within birthday cards, thank you notes and tried and true recipes. They reflect a personal sense of that person deliberately putting pen to paper in their own particular style. When our loved ones are gone they are tangible evidence of their previous existence. I’ve accumulated a special collection of handwritten examples from family members who are no longer alive. I hope to do the same for my own family.

Another thing to ponder is how others will remember your life. From experience I know how difficult it is to write the eulogy of a family member for their funeral. It makes sense to keep a written recollection of particular memories while you are still alive to aid your loved ones in the writing of your own eulogy. Funny stories, things you loved doing, memorable occasions, ways you contributed, can all be included. Also think about meaningful ways you wish to be remembered – favourite songs, verse and special photos that depict your unique life.

In that way your own story transcends your physical presence. You collate the highlights for yourself and allow space for your loved ones to expand the story with their own reflections.

Read more …

The Handwritten Note.

Writing Yourself Home.

Our life story continually evolves. Over time we add new chapters and revisit previous ones with more clarity. As we interact with others our stories become refined.

There are opportunities along the way for us to record our stories through a range of creative means. Collating our recollections in tangible ways. Finding ourselves in those stories and choosing those reminders of us that will remain beyond our physical existence.

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Life Beyond The Nest

November 15, 2021 by JanSmith

Although it has been quite a few years since my own children became independent, I know others who are experiencing the emptying of their family ‘nest’. It’s a time when our children head off to live or study elsewhere, no longer a daily presence in our lives. One thing I found with my own empty nesting experience was a distinct lack of guidance and support around this transition. There were plenty of books about parenting and raising children, but not so much about rediscovering self-identity and purpose after the role was complete. For me, it became a personal journey of discovery.

Photo by Ben White on Unsplash

As our children reach young adulthood it’s a time when we may finally feel contented with our parenting ability. We have a sense we have figured it out, only to find ourselves devoid of an active role in rearing our children. We are left questioning who we are and what our current value is to the world.

“An empty nest is designed to be filled again. Just not with the same flock. Allow it to attract new, creative abundance”

Layla Morgan Wilde

As women, we are transformed by motherhood. We are no longer a child ourselves; we are now the parent of a child. Dr Britta Bushnell, childbirth educator and Douala, observed we are facing the death of our own innocence, selfishness and immaturity. At the time of our first child’s birth we realize the enormity of the task of being fully and completely responsible for the welfare and well being of another human being. We do it through trial and error and sleepless nights, evolving our role with the ever changing needs of our family. As Britta remarks, we face the possibility of being ‘mortally wounded in many ways’ with the intense loving bond we create.

As our children progressively leave the family home there is a need to review and rediscover who we are.  To shed the responsibilities that have dominated our life. It’s a time to find the woman we want to be again.

Here are some reflections to help you explore this journey: –

Rest: – After the physical tiredness of decades of mothering it is a time to rest for a while. To give up what was the focus of your life and to allow yourself to create a new foundation for the journey ahead. Instead of creating new ‘To Do’ lists straight away, give yourself permission to relax and take your time. You have earnt this respite to reflect on your mother role, gain clarity and a renewed sense of purpose. Then you are better placed to take action toward personal change.

Remember:- Ask yourself who and what have been neglected through those years. What gifts were not utilized while you were in the throws of motherhood? Perhaps it is a time to rekindle the romance with your partner. It is also a time to remember perhaps the young woman you were before parenting. Who was she? What were her passions, traits, those things that gave her enjoyment, peace and contentment? Find ways to actively instill these parts of yourself back into your life. You are more than your previous roles and identity.

Reduce Your Responsibility : – You can begin to take less responsibility for others. Your young adult ‘children’ will need to assume responsibility for their own choices and day to day decisions. They will falter and make errors of judgement, just as we all did. Acknowledge that you have done the best job possible to prepare them for adulthood.  

Reset Your Role : – As children leave home to venture into the world our concept of ‘family’ changes. Our role, once all-encompassing, can become one that is more supportive and advisory.  By focusing on yourself you can allow a new identity to emerge that is personal, authentic and independent of others. It is a wonderful time for your children to see you as a distinct person separate from being their mother. A woman who is vulnerable and has her own perspective on life. The use of ritual to celebrate this ’empty nesting’ transition is powerful.

Prioritize Yourself :- Prioritize you own needs and attend to you own welfare and well-being. You will find there is more opportunity for adventure, creativity and discovery of your ‘inner child’. It may be time to take more care with your physical health and well-being. You may also want to return to study, volunteer or create a new business. This is your time to make new personal life decisions.

This coming year I am introducing a six week series of Women’s Circle specifically to support women to discover themselves beyond the empty nest. I’d like to guide and encourage you. Something I couldn’t find when I was going through this transition myself.

If this sounds interesting to you, email me at jan@healingthematriarch.com  I also encourage you to join the Healing the Matriarch Community private Facebook group. A space where women can delve deeper into the content of each blog.

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