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Beginning again... I'm adding favorite columns, articles, essays and stories. My book of essays was published in 2016. I will attempt to bring the series up to date. Current date is January 2023 and there is much to add. MY WRITING LIFE. SIMPLY SCROLL DOWN...

Saturday, December 10, 2011

December 2011 Dear Deb Column


Dear Readers of mine. This year I’ve published a novel, accumulated another dozen LIVING, LOVING & LAUGHING columns and climbed upon my lectern regarding HOUSING ASSISTANCE, repeatedly trying to ignore a gnawing sense my words were going unread. The other day on MPR an author was interviewed regarding his booked titled READ THIS OR YOU'RE DEAD TO ME.  Not long ago I would have stolen this cynical title and sent it into the world in rant form because I feared I had so few readers.
Well, not so the last couple of months (I’m happy to say)! Mr. MPR Author can have his title. You, dear readers, have found and used your voices.   Not only do I have “readers” but, I have “responsive readers!”  I’m overjoyed.  There is far too much from you for one column alone.  Still, keep those cards and letter coming please...

THE EMPTY NEST: Blessing or Curse? 

Dear Deb,

I am a recent empty nester and I just want to say that, although I miss my kids…I don't miss them that much.   My husband and I have a suddenly deeper connection in our own marriage, enjoying so much uninterrupted time together for the first time in 21 years.  We go out on a date and know that when we come home we won't be faced with siblings needing mediation or one or the other needing to process the phone call they just finished.  Whatever mood we set on the date need not be broken by returning home.  Or we settle in to watch a movie together with the same knowledge that the evening is all ours.  How refreshing…and quite honestly, sexy.

But don't get me wrong.  I'm really looking forward to my kids coming home for vacations and even for the summertime, but as much fun, laughter and love as the house will be filled with during those times, I know I won't mind the return to this quieter life where my husband and I are once again focused mostly on each other.

Sadly, I'm finding that our empty nest experience is perhaps not all that common.  We recently attended a picnic at the home of a friend.  I was chatting with a woman who commented on the fact that I was a recent empty nester.  She was a bit older than me and before I could say anything she said, "I think that the empty nest is the saddest time in a marriage."  Really?  She just said that?  I was taken aback for two reasons.  One, someone I'm only marginally acquainted with seemed to be telling me that her marriage, in and of itself, sucks big time… and that's awkward.  Two, if I'm honest, I will have to enthusiastically disagree with her and that seems a bit heartless.   I just chose to say that we were finding our new freedom bittersweet.

Furthermore,  a friend's husband recently broke into tears while out to dinner for his birthday,  because it was the first birthday his daughter (who shares his birthdate) had not been present with him.  And when I say broke into tears, I mean he sobbed.  My friend told me the crying is a daily occurrence.  And yet another friend has shared that she is wondering what she and her husband will do once their last birdie flies from the nest next fall because everything outside of their jobs is attending his events and taking care of his needs and she can't remember the last time they went on a date.

So, I don't really have a question, I'm just a little sad by the news that the return to simply being a couple, after years of quite happily sharing the highs and lows of parenthood, is a real blow to so many folks, rather than an exciting next phase in their marriages.  I told everyone who asked me in advance of our empty nest that I thought it would be bittersweet, but truly its not, its just sweet.  And I'm looking for more folks who share my joy because I have to believe there are more of them out there than I've discovered so far.  Perhaps they wouldn't mind writing in.  

Your friend who is, 

Happy to be going to Parent's Day at least 2 hours away

Dear Happy, 

Your letter cheers me greatly.  Enough said.  You heard the woman Readers.  Perhaps you wouldn’t mind writing in.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS & SEASON’S GREETINGS

1 comment:

  1. I wanted to add my vote for happy empty nesters! There is an old joke that you don't know true freedom until the kids leave home and the dog dies. Well, our kid left home three years ago and our beloved dog died this past summer, and truthfully, we love our empty nest! We are very selfish with our time. We eat dinner in front of the tv while watching the latest episode of whatever cable series we get on Netflix. We leave the house and don't think about how long we'll be gone. We go away for the weekend and don't even look back. And I finally can run errands after work instead of rushing right home for kids or animal. Our relationship has less stress and more fun.

    I'm not saying that launching our only kid was easy. There were plenty of times in the first few months when there were tears, and the adjustment to my new role in his life still at times strikes me as strange. But I remember when we came home from dropping him at school. I walked in and looked around and said to my husband, "We get to live in this beautiful house all by ourselves?" And it's been great ever since.

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