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Post by merry27 on Aug 10, 2024 15:41:23 GMT
I have 2 kids and my oldest just moved out on his own. He only moved 2 towns over so we will see him but it’s still hard. I’m so excited for him but am going to miss seeing him everyday. He has been such a joy to raise but man did it go by too fast. Just got home and had to close the door to his empty room. I know this is a part of life but I’m feeling sad and emotional today.
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MDscrapaholic
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,636
Location: Down by the bay....
Jun 25, 2014 20:49:07 GMT
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Post by MDscrapaholic on Aug 10, 2024 15:52:24 GMT
I'm sorry. It is hard. Give yourself some grace going forward. You will be so excited to see him when he stops by for something he forgot!
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FurryP
Drama Llama
To pea or not to pea...
Posts: 7,287
Site Supporter
Jun 26, 2014 19:58:26 GMT
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Post by FurryP on Aug 10, 2024 16:35:33 GMT
Good thing he still loves you!
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Post by malibou on Aug 10, 2024 16:59:22 GMT
I hear you. My only moved out a couple of weeks ago. Half way across the country 😳. Dh and I have been sleeping in his room. We miss him so much.
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snyder
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,346
Location: Colorado
Apr 26, 2017 6:14:47 GMT
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Post by snyder on Aug 10, 2024 17:13:22 GMT
{{{Hugs}}} Pamper yourself today and for as long as you need. Maybe you could set up a once a week meal together or something like that. I'm sure he will miss you all as well.
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ellen
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,808
Jun 30, 2014 12:52:45 GMT
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Post by ellen on Aug 10, 2024 17:19:47 GMT
It’s such a weird feeling. I remember taking my oldest out to college. It was about a 3.5 hour drive from where we live and we didn’t know anyone who lived in that city. We went there the day before move in day and made a trip to the local mall. My girls were shopping and my husband and I were having coffee at the food court. I remember saying, “Can you believe we’re just going to leave her here?” It is such a change in mindset and it felt so strange when we went back home.
Then we figured out quickly that she really needed it and we adjusted. It will be ok.
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Post by flanz on Aug 10, 2024 17:58:59 GMT
Hugs to you merry27 and malibou. Trust that it will be alright. Transitions can be so challenging. I agree that trying to schedule a regular dinner together, whether it's weekly or twice a month or ________ is a great idea. Probably appreciated by your DS too. Our kids, now in their 30s, have been extremely independent since leaving for college at 18. One was a 6 hr drive away but only came home a 3-4 times a year. the other was 20 hrs and several states away. It WAS hard and it was great to see them thriving independently. Our kids still live far away from us. time together is precious indeed.
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Post by bc2ca on Aug 10, 2024 18:03:44 GMT
It is a huge transition so I understand the sadness.
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Post by quietgirl on Aug 10, 2024 18:13:04 GMT
Im sorry. It is hard, and man it goes so fast. Take care of yourself.
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Post by Lexica on Aug 10, 2024 18:16:38 GMT
I remember the day my only son moved out to live with friends in my same city. I helped him pack, gave him furniture for his room and a few things to add to their living room. I smiled and waved as he drove off. Then I went into the house and fell apart. I cried so hard that first night, all alone in that big house. It took me much longer to adjust than I thought it would. Looking back, I should have sold that big house and moved into something smaller right away. He called, but not often enough for this lonely mama. I didn’t call him too often because he needed to cut the cord and be a grown up young man. As much as I missed him, I knew that his moving out and not calling me too often meant I had done the job I was supposed to do. I raised an independent, strong, capable young man.
And those phone calls from him to tell me things like he was the only one of the group that knew how to cook made me so proud of him. The guys voted him as house chef and gave him money to grocery shop and prepare dinners. He had been helping me in the kitchen since he was about 6, standing on a chair to be able to reach the stove and doing things like stirring pots of soup for me. He loved adding the different chopped vegetables and different seasonings into the pot. He would taste the soup and say it needed this spice or that spice. As he grew up, he wanted to learn about all the spices in the cabinet and what they were typically used for. He smelled and tasted each one. And he experimented and I had to make him test things on a small bowl instead of the entire dish because some of his wild ideas were major fails.
Since it was just the two of us, he had either helped or was in the room for all aspects of cooking and cleaning so he knew so many things that these other boys had no clue about. He was shocked that their moms had never taught them how to properly handle their own home one day. When I started teaching him how to cook, I told him he was going to want to eat meals for the rest of his life so he had better learn how to make things to feed himself. It helped that my father was a terrific cook and when he retired, he took over the cooking for he and mom. My son adored his grandfather and would help him in the kitchen, learning how to sharpen a knife and watching everything my dad did. I told him he may end up married to a woman who either hated cooking or had never learned how, so he may have to cook for his family. The day he thanked me for teaching him how to run his own house was one of my most cherished memories.
And it did actually end up that his fiance never learned to cook! She was an only child raised by a single mom like he was, but her mother never cooked much and they ate a lot of frozen dinners and take out stuff. My son had taken culinary training in college so he now cooks circles around me! So my advice that he had better learn how to feed himself and his future family was spot on and he cooks all their meals and is teaching her too.
But I admit, raising him was the best time of my life and I still miss him so much. No doubt a big downside to being a single parent. I think that is just the way it goes. It is like being fired from a job you loved. I have learned to fill the empty with other things, of course, but raising my son just went by much too fast.
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Post by MichyM on Aug 10, 2024 18:20:52 GMT
Big soft, squishy hugs. Mine moved out in 2008 to go to college across the country, then settled on the opposite coast after graduating. I still miss him, and he's been out of my house for nearly half his life. That said, it DOES get better, I promise!
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rickmer
Pearl Clutcher
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Jul 1, 2014 20:20:18 GMT
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Post by rickmer on Aug 10, 2024 20:19:27 GMT
my daughter moved to Copenhagen end of last summer to do her masters. her younger brother started at university in our city, but the school is closer to his dad's. For the first couple of weeks he continued to go back and forth weekly but soon decided he would just stay at his dad's. he is at the library until midnight each night and it's only 20 mins back to his dad's. at that time it's closer to 45-50 mins to my place. so I lost two at the same time basically. I totally understand his decision and support him, would never make him feel bad about it. he does come here for Christmas break and when school was done in the spring. and he comes over for dinner or I take him and youngest ds to a movie or out for dins.... but it's a big adjustment. luckily, I still have youngest ds, he is starting grade 12 next month, he has spent almost the entire summer with me since his summer job is in my neck of the woods. I can't even imagine the loneliness that is waiting for me.... but at least his high school is across the street so even on his weeks at his dad's, he still does pop by. big hugs to you and glad your son is doing so well! xoxo
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Judy26
Pearl Clutcher
MOTFY Bitchy Nursemaid
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Location: NW PA
Jun 25, 2014 23:50:38 GMT
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Post by Judy26 on Aug 10, 2024 20:43:45 GMT
I know that feeling. It’s so difficult. My kids are both married and have been out of the house for a few years but both thoughtfully left me boxes and boxes of things they don’t want but don’t want to get rid of either. I have such fond memories of them every time I trip over those #%^% boxes!
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Post by peano on Aug 10, 2024 21:11:00 GMT
I remember it was so hard when DS moved into an apartment with his longtime girlfriend after graduation in 2022. They are both getting their master's and live about 45 minutes away. It was a tough adjustment for me--I still haven't been able to go through his room and he's got piles of stuff he dropped there after undergrad, as well as a huge drawer full of Lego and Star Wars memorabilia. I resolved to make monthly dates to either drive there or have him come here for a meal and to catch up, and I really look forward to that.
What I can say is that moving out has done wonders for his maturity level, so there's that.
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Bridget in MD
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Jun 25, 2014 20:40:00 GMT
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Post by Bridget in MD on Aug 10, 2024 23:28:02 GMT
I have 2 kids and my oldest just moved out on his own. He only moved 2 towns over so we will see him but it’s still hard. I’m so excited for him but am going to miss seeing him everyday. He has been such a joy to raise but man did it go by too fast. Just got home and had to close the door to his empty room. I know this is a part of life but I’m feeling sad and emotional today. Sitting on the bench with you - just packed up the car to take my baby, DS, to college 12 hrs away. He's been my buddy, so this will be tough...
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spokanemom
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May 17, 2022 18:50:54 GMT
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Post by spokanemom on Aug 11, 2024 1:27:50 GMT
My oldest joined the Army when he was 19. He had been planning that since he was about 5. It was so incredibly painful to have him leave knowing that he wouldn't be able to come home on a whim, we had zero idea where he would end up (the answer is - all over the world), and for the first few months, there were no phone calls either. It was not a good time. There were so many tears, so often. When my youngest left home at 20, I took him shopping for items he would need for his new apartment. It was a lot of fun getting him prepared to leave the nest. His new nest was 5 minutes away. He was also a completely exhausting teenager. I didn't cry when he left.
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Post by scrapmaven on Aug 11, 2024 2:30:21 GMT
When we dropped yds off at college it was one of the hardest things I've ever done. Ods was still at home at that time. I will never forget seeing his face as we drove off. I just felt the biggest guilt about abandoning my baby. Turns out he had a fantastic roommate and they were together all 4 years. Then he stayed for his Masters. He found his life's calling at that school and had the best experiences. He had an amazing professor who was in charge of his department. His professor's wife was even more amazing. I'm so proud of my son and the man that he's become.
Your son is doing what he is supposed to be doing. You did a great job, mom. He's all grown up and thriving. What more could you want? You'll adjust and the fact that he's nearby will make it much easier, too.
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camcas
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Jun 26, 2014 3:41:19 GMT
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Post by camcas on Aug 11, 2024 6:23:33 GMT
My 2 DS have both moved to another state for work It’s hard We Live in a rural town and when they moved in their time to the city for uni some years ago I think I grieved for about 6 months . I am used to it now because the move has been very good for both of them …but on days like today when it is one of their birthdays and we can only connect by phone/FaceTime and not with cake and hugs and laughter I feel it all over again. I try to remind myself that I need to be proud they have successfully left the nest and I have raised two wonderful men but …..🥹it’s still hard
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Post by airforcemomof1 on Aug 11, 2024 14:20:49 GMT
I, too, know that feeling. When I left my son at college for the first time I knew our lives would never be the same. And I was right. He still has a crap load of stuff at my house and as hard it was for a long while for him to be gone I now want his stuff gone! He’s been married for four years and yet his stuff is still here!
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Post by gramasue on Aug 11, 2024 15:17:27 GMT
It will take time to get used to it. Give time ... time. You will eventually adjust and actually enjoy and look forward to the time you do get to spend with him. Yes, it will be different, but it will also be joyful.
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peabay
Prolific Pea
Posts: 9,941
Jun 25, 2014 19:50:41 GMT
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Post by peabay on Aug 11, 2024 15:26:22 GMT
I just want to say I know. I totally understand and you want them to fly but it's so hard to watch them go.
My youngest just finished college and is going back to Chicago to live with friends and I'm both so happy for her and so sad for me - but still happy that I raised 4 successful, happy children...I want them to go, but I just enjoy their company so much.
It's the very definition of bittersweet.
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Post by Darcy Collins on Aug 11, 2024 15:39:55 GMT
I'm feeling lucky as my daughter went to college 1000+ miles away, but ended up taking her first job just 30 minutes away. We've had so much fun setting up her apartment last week and are planning on meeting for lunch every week or so. I can't imagine I'll be as lucky with my son next year - he's also 1,000+ miles away at university. And honestly I know my daughter is likely to go on for a PhD who knows where - so am enjoying while it lasts! Transitions are tough!
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Post by merry27 on Aug 11, 2024 23:51:23 GMT
Thank you so much for your stories, advice and encouragement. I really appreciate it. He forgives in yesterday and I cried really hard after I left him. DH was sad too so we went to dinner and had a nice evening together. I don’t do well with change so it will take me a little while to get adjusted. I awhile I am sad, I am so excited for him!!
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Post by 950nancy on Aug 12, 2024 3:27:57 GMT
Mine both moved out on the same day (to live together). It was sad, and then it was better, and then it got so very nice. It just takes time. You'll have lots of emotions and they are all what you should be feeling.
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Post by ntsf on Aug 12, 2024 3:37:40 GMT
my two out of three kids have been gone for over 10 yrs. one lives overseas. I am happy for them.. and almost everything of theirs is gone from my house.
we always lived 800 miles from family and it is so easy now with facetime and whatsapp. one kid is disabled and lives at home.. it would be nice if she could live on her own.. so at this point, we have never had a home to ourselves. she is pretty self sufficient in some ways.
I think over time, you get excited to see what your kids get up to.. and phone calls and video calls are very easy.
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Post by smasonnc on Aug 12, 2024 3:46:42 GMT
In my experience, they leave in one of two ways. One, they're snotty and evil for a couple of months beforehand so you count the hours until they leave. Or Two, as in your case, they're unbelievably sweet during that same period, in which case you collapse in a blubbering mass upon their departure.
You can never predict which route the kid will choose, either. My son unexpectedly chose the latter and I was so broken-hearted that I couldn't look at his stuff so I redecorated his room like "freakin' France" as he put it, having returned to his former smart-@$$ self after a few months at college.
I wish you well. It does get easier.
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Post by peasapie on Aug 12, 2024 8:29:33 GMT
I remember the feelings you are having and I’m sending you a big virtual hug.
A few years ago I started meeting up with my son once a month for breakfast. Of course I see him and his wife and my grandson at family gatherings, but these breakfast days give us time to chat one on one and discuss things like how he feels about his job, hobbies, his friends etc — things we hadn’t talked much about since the days when he lived at home. Maybe you can eventually start a new tradition of seeing your son now and then just to share a meal and chat. It’s one of the best parts of living together and one you can recreate.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 26, 2024 0:44:13 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 12, 2024 10:30:40 GMT
It is so hard, and yes, it does go by way too fast. All of my girls have their own homes. One is 10 hours away. She hates it and so do we, but she doesn't have a choice at the moment. I am with her now but have to say goodbye this afternoon. I am DREADING it because I know she will hurt so bad too. Hugs to all the mamas.
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Post by littlemama on Aug 12, 2024 11:45:35 GMT
I think of it as:
We have been preparing our child(ren) their whole lives to be successful and live independently of us. Im excited for my ds who bought a house and moved a few weeks ago. Was it odd seing his room empty? Sure, but he is only 10 minutes away from us and we talk daily.
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Post by cat2007 on Aug 12, 2024 13:37:56 GMT
Oh my gosh! I have one in Tampa, one in NYC, one in Pittsburgh and the baby is leaving for college in northern NYS in (gulp) 10 days. Ugh. I feel your pain, mama, I really do.
Like other peas have said: we've done our job well if they have successfully been able to leave the nest. Am I sad? Sometimes. Am I proud? EVERY SINGLE F'ING DAY I AM!!!
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