Children leaving home is a transition point for everyone in the family,” says Dr Roisin Joyce, a clinical psychologist based at EBTC (Evidence-Based Therapy Centre) in Galway city.
“As with all transitions in life, it is a point when we are more vulnerable to emotional distress as we adapt to our changing circumstances.
“There can be a big gap in parents’ lives, particularly if the children were a central focus. Having invested a lot of time and emotional energy in your children, feelings of sadness and loss are common when they move away. While sadness and loss are very common feelings, guilt and regret can also be present. Parents may feel that they haven’t had enough time with their children and now they are grown up and moving away.”
Roisin provides psychological therapy to people with a range of difficulties, including anxiety and depression.
“A number of people have spoken about the significance of their children leaving home during their therapy. This is particularly true where children have been the main focus of a parent’s life. It is often a time when parents reflect on their life and consider the next chapter. This can lead to feelings of sadness and loss but also to a renewed commitment to themselves and personal growth.
For most parents, it’s a case of mixed feelings.
“Along with negative feelings, there can be positive feelings, a sense of having done a good job, of gaining independence and an opportunity to focus on the next chapter of their lives.”
It is important to remember, she adds, that the feelings of sadness and loss that occur when a child leaves home are a validation of the relationship a parent has with the child.
“That can be seen as a positive because it communicates the love you have for the person and how much you value the relationship. In fact, those very feelings of sadness and loneliness can motivate you to maintain your connection with them and work on the next chapter of your relationship.”
TIPS
DR CATHERINE LONG
Dublin-based psychologist Dr Catherine Long also encounters empty nest emotions in her work.
As well as mothers questioning their role in life after children leave, she says fathers can experience sadness and guilt around that time too.
“They may regret that they didn’t do more with their children when they were growing up, seeing it as a missed opportunity to connect with their child and children.”
Sadness is the strongest empty nest emotion she comes across.
“Being a parent can be a big part of a person’s identity. When your children leave, it can mean a huge empty space in yourself.”
Relationship issues can surface between the parents when children fly the nest too, she says.
“Often there isn’t a lot of time for each other when children are growing up. When it comes to the empty nest period, some people can be delighted that they are going to have this opportunity to re-kindle their relationship, but, equally, sometimes that connection may have been lost and the relationship may be in trouble.
“Sometimes the problems were there all along and parents pushed them aside or repressed them for the sake of the children, but once the children have left home that bond or glue that’s been keeping them together can start to unravel.”
That said, many couples don’t suffer, she says.
“For many, it’s a positive thing, an opportunity to reinvigorate their relationship or hobbies that they had put aside. I personally know people who would say: ‘Roll on the empty nest.’ Not everybody experiences it as a negative. As I said, part of how you handle it is related to how much of your identity is tied up with being a parent.”
Another factor is how well your children are doing, she says.
“If you see them getting on well and being confident, it’s going to be easier to let go and be able to move on rather than if they are struggling and still need help.”
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THE ROOM DEBATE
What to do with a now empty room can be a touchy subject. Should it stay exactly as it was, there to be returned to occasionally? Should another sibling be allowed move in or should it become Dad’s man cave or Mum’s new office?
Roisin Joyce says: “We are very territorial as humans, so losing a bedroom can stir up difficult emotions. Talk about this with your children and get all the emotions around it out into the open. That way you can come up with a compromise that everyone agrees with.”
Catherine Long says: “It’s something to be negotiated, certainly in the early years after a child leaves. They might have strong feelings about it. It’s healthy to let go (both parents and now adult child) but it doesn’t have to happen immediately.”
• See www.ebtc.ie
• See www.onehourforme.ie
• A good book on the subject is Celia Dodd’s The Empty Nest: How to survive and stay close to your adult child. CL