The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Ultimate Advice for Your Next Chapter (After Your Kids Have Left Home)
Episode Date: September 9, 2024In today’s episode, you are getting the ultimate advice for navigating any major life change. Mel is now an empty nester and is giving her best wisdom about how to step into a new chapter. She is s...haring deeply personal advice about her experience with this transition.Whether you’re also figuring out your next steps after the kids have left home, or are navigating a move, relationship change, or new job, this advice is exactly what you need to hear.This episode will be your guide for how to take on the unknown with ease and comfort. It’s exactly what you need to find peace and live a more fulfilled life. The truth is, things don’t change with time. It’s what you do with that time that matters. And you’re getting the playbook you need today.For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s new free 26-page workbook, What Do You Really Want, to finally answer that question and redefine your future. Watch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast
So I'm sitting here above the garage in Vermont and it's just a few days after dropping our son off at college and
I gotta be honest with you. I
Didn't expect to have this empty feeling right now. I
mean the house is so quiet, and it's just me and my husband.
This is a huge transition. And I know I'm not alone in dealing with a major life change right now.
I know I'm not the only one dealing with this topic of now transitioning to an empty nest,
dealing with this topic of now transitioning to an empty nest and how you create a whole new chapter of your life, you know, like that. In fact, this is
the single biggest topic that I'm getting questions about right now. Our
inbox at MelRobbins.com is so overloaded about this topic. So I've taken a few
days to process my own experience and how bizarre it is to suddenly come home to an empty house.
And I have so much that I want to share with you.
This is the advice that I'm giving to myself right now,
and I know it is exactly what you need to hear too.
Hey, it's Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited to spend this time together with you, not only because I'm alone in this
empty house and I want to be together with you, but also because I cannot wait to share
what I've been experiencing with you.
And if you're brand new, I just want to take a moment and welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family
and say, I am so glad you're here.
I also want to acknowledge you for taking the time
to listen to something that could help you be happier
and improve your life.
And this conversation that you and I are going to have today,
I can already feel the ripples of positive change
it's going to create in your life
and in so many people's lives that you care about, because you and I are going to talk about I can already feel the ripples of positive change it's gonna create in your life
and in so many people's lives that you care about
because you and I are gonna talk about that huge transition
that happens when you become an empty nester.
And can I just start by saying,
I freaking hate that term, empty nester.
I mean, who wants to feel something
that begins with the word empty?
Let's just unpack that.
Empty stomach?
That's not a fun experience.
Empty refrigerator?
That means that you're starving.
Empty tank of gas?
You're not going anywhere.
Empty wallet?
Ugh, you're broke.
Empty nest?
Who came up with this term?
This is a terrible term.
And can I just get someone to rebrand
this enormous transition in life to make it sound better?
I've heard the term bird launchers.
I love that.
I love that term.
You're not an empty nester.
You've launched a bunch of birds.
And I'm gonna remind you,
just like I keep reminding myself right now,
those little birds, yes, they launched,
they are flying back.
So we don't need to be acting like somebody died, okay?
They may not move back in with you.
They may not live down the street from you, but I'm going to tell you something.
They will come back.
They will be in and out of your life.
But in the meantime, you and I, we're sitting in an empty nest.
And I've thought about what advice, Mel, what advice do you need to hear?
What advice do you need, Mel,
to help you deal with this empty feeling?
And I have so much, I cannot wait to share this with you.
Because just like you have to fill up
an empty fridge with food,
and you got to fill up an empty wallet with some cash,
and you got to fill up an empty tank with some gas,
if you're going to go somewhere,
you and I have to fill up our lives
with things that make us happy.
You have to fill up your time with something other
than thinking about your kids.
It's not just our kids who have launched from the nest,
you need to launch yourself from that nest too.
And that brings me to our conversation today.
It is time for you and me to launch ourselves
into a very full chapter of your life.
And what I also love about what we're going to do in this time together today is that
this is one of those episodes where I'm not only talking with you, I am talking to myself
at the same time.
Because now that our last kid is left for college, I am also back at home living in
the empty nest.
So the advice that you and I are going to talk about for going through this massive
period of change in our lives, this is the same thing that I'm saying to myself.
Because the truth is, things don't change with time.
It's what you do with that time that matters.
I'm going to say that again. It's not time do with that time that matters. I'm gonna say that again.
It's not time that changes things.
It's what you do with that time that matters.
And the first place I wanna start
is by putting this massive transition
into the proper context.
Because when you understand the larger context
of what's happening and why you feel the way that you feel,
it's not gonna scare you that much.
You're not going to feel lost. Because if you're sad or you feel lonely or you suddenly don't know what to do with all this time, I want to tell you something. This is a mentally healthy response to a major life transition.
I think you need to hear that again.
Feeling sad or lonely or like you don't know what to do
with the time or the silence,
you're having a mentally healthy response
to a major life transition.
And yes, I'm reminding myself of this
every single day right now.
This is a major moment and milestone in your life.
I've been thinking a lot about it
in the context of the Olympics,
because you've been training for this moment
for at least 18 years.
I mean, depending upon how many kids you have,
you've been in this parenting game for a long time.
And like all Olympians, the second the games are over
and the fanfare ends,
it's a mentally healthy response to feel a little sad,
to feel a little depressed, to feel a little lost.
In fact, can you just stop
and give yourself a little credit for how you showed up?
I mean, it's been all about the kids all the time.
The only other things that you've been able to squeeze
in there is work deadlines
and maybe things you need to do with your aging parents.
That's been your life for 18 months straight.
From the stress and anxiety and the fights and the frustrations over college applications,
which for us here in the Robbins household, that lasted all the way into the summer because
our son was waiting to hear from a weightless spot that never materialized. And once you do know where you're going to go to college, then what are you focused
on? Wrapping up high school, which I call the season of lasts. The last game as a senior,
the last party, the last time you're going camping with your friends, the last big sleepover, the last
time you're seeing your friends, the last prom, then it's all about the first. Suddenly when they graduated from high school, now it's the first, the first time we're going
to college. And you know what happens when you start focusing on actually going to college?
You become maniacally obsessed with surrounding your kids with as much stuff as they can take.
And I'm going to tell you something, as much college shopping as we did, I'm drawing the line at the headboard.
There was no way I was buying my child a headboard for a college dorm room.
Have we lost our minds for crying?
We're bringing headboards to a dorm room.
You've already spent your life savings at Sam's Club and Walmart and Target.
In fact, as we were at Walmart and we have just two cartloads full of stuff
and the woman is checking us out, beep, beep, beep,
scanning all the items.
She looks up and she goes,
is someone going to college?
How'd you know that?
Was it the $500 that I was spending on everything
from a pack of socks to a twin XL sheets?
You're right, he's going to college.
That's why you're exhausted.
That's also why you're broke.
And then you load all this stuff up into your car
and you head off to college.
And the entire drive, am I right?
They sit silently on their headphones,
staring at their phone for the entire drive.
They don't even talk to you.
And then you pull in, right?
And you got all these friendly volunteers
and they got the signs and they're waving
and you roll down the windows and you're extra friendly
and your kid says nothing
because they're still on their headphones
looking at their phone.
And then a super cute upper-class person comes out
and they've got this big tub on wheels
and they roll it up to your car.
And then you throw all that crap
that you just bought into it.
And then off you go right into the dorm
and into the cement cubicle
that they are gonna call home for the next year.
And that's when it hits you.
Maybe I should have bought the headboard.
I mean, this is a little depressing
with the cement walls in here.
And I have to give some props to our daughter, Sawyer.
She was home and she's 25
and she went with us
to help move her brother in.
And I gotta say, the second we walked into
that bare cement dorm room,
it's like her muscle memory took over.
Boom, OCD, four years of the college experience,
put right to use.
That bed was lifted up, the plastic drawers that we bought
were stacked in the
right place. All of a sudden, the whole thing was pulled together. It was absolutely amazing.
The desk is in the right place. The bed is now lofted. Those plastic drawers were stacked
and put in the right thing. And all of a sudden, just like that, 90 minutes is over and it's time to leave.
Because if you stay any longer, it would be weird for them and for you.
And then it's the last hug.
And in case no one told you that last hug,
that last hug was the medal ceremony
for the 18 years you just put in as a parent.
That was it.
All that work leading right to that moment.
And if you stop and think, how did it end?
Mom, you're embarrassing me.
Okay, I think you guys should leave now.
Orientation's about to start.
Do you have to take one more photo?
And then you get back into the car and you drive home.
And then you get back home.
Have you even stopped to realize
that you've been drinking from a fire hose
for your kid for the last 18 years?
It's kind of astonishing when you really stop
and think about how much energy you and I put into this.
I mean, here's what I want to say to you.
First, I want to say you did it.
I mean, I am so proud of you and me.
I mean, we did it.
Your kids may not be celebrating you,
but I will celebrate you.
And you need to celebrate yourself.
And look, if they were handing out gold medals
in parenting, you get one.
Whether you bought the headboard or not,
you deserve a gold medal, you earned it.
And while I'm on that, I want you to send this
to every single parent you know,
because they deserve a gold medal,
and they need to hear that.
And so I'm sitting here, I'm like, come and get it.
I will tell them they deserve a gold medal.
And by the way, if you're one of the millions
of young adults who listen to this show around the world,
this is the episode to send to your parents
because they are going to need to hear the advice
that I am about to share.
And what I love most about the advice you need to hear
is that it's the same advice that the young adults
and the college students and the kids
that have gone off to the military that they need to hear.
And you never stop and think about the fact in this moment
that the transition to college is the exact same emotional experience
as the transition that you're going through,
where your kids have left for college.
You and your kids are on a parallel emotional track right now.
You have so much more in common based on the parallel emotional track right now. You have so much more in common
based on the shared emotional experience
and the transition and the things
that you need to be doing for yourself
that they also need to be doing for themselves.
And I personally think it's really cool
that I'm going through the same thing as my kid right now.
It really helps me to think about it that way. And so
I said that we were going to start by zooming out and looking at the largest possible context
of what is actually going on during this major transition in life. Because we can call it
transitioning to college, we can call it learning to fill up an empty nest. But what you're really just going through is a major life change.
That's it. That's all we're doing here.
We're going through a major life change.
And this is going to happen over and over and over in your life.
It happens if you break up or get divorced.
It happens if you move to a different city.
It happens if you lose someone that you love.
And it can even happen if you start to a different city. It happens if you lose someone that you love. And it can even happen if you start to realize,
I'm just not willing to accept a life
where I'm not as happy as I deserve to be.
And as you start to make changes,
you're going through this major life transition.
And so let's just talk about what happens
when you go through any life transition
and the reason why this kind of change is so hard.
Well, the first reason why it's hard is because you have to go through it.
Like, there's no avoiding the hard part of this.
That's what makes it hard.
You don't have a choice but to go through it.
So let's zoom out and talk about what is actually happening
when you are experiencing a major change.
Because when we talk about change
and we use language to describe it,
we always talk about the change we're feeling emotionally.
That's why we're like, we're sad, we're lost, right?
I feel like lonely, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah.
We use all these words that describe the feeling of it.
But a major life transition is so much bigger
and cooler than what you're feeling.
When your life goes from one chapter to another,
it's change that's happening at a physiological,
a neurological, a biological, a psychological,
and all kinds of all allological levels, right?
And we're only talking about how we feel.
But I want you to understand what's happening at a deeper level because then you're going
to be able to move through it in a more empowering way.
What you're actually doing is you are unlearning the way you used to do life. You're unlearning the patterns from the old chapter,
and you're just in the process
of learning a whole new way to do things.
That's what's happening.
And whenever I think about a major life change,
there's this visual that always comes to mind
that helps me.
So imagine that you wake up tomorrow morning and all of a sudden
there's just this huge surprise snowstorm and everything around you is covered in two feet of
beautiful, pristine, brand new snow. Now imagine that you have to plow a path through that snow.
And that path that is getting plowed through that snow, that's the process that your body
is going through right now, and your brain, and your nervous system.
As your body, brain, and nervous system is trying to learn new patterns. This is why it feels unnerving. You're
learning new brain pathways. Your senses are pushing through an entirely new
experience. Whether that's the experience of all the new sight, smell, sounds in
college or it's the sudden experience of feeling empty at home.
And I think part of the reason why change is hard
is we only use words that describe the emotion.
I'm sad, I'm lonely, I'm empty, I'm lost.
What if I told you, those are just words
that describe this unbelievably cool thing
that you're able to do,
which is plowing new paths forward in your life,
learning new patterns, learning how to change and grow.
And if you think about this transition
as simply the normal human process
of unlearning the way that you used to do things and learning and plowing forward
through a new way of moving through your life, what you're doing is you're mastering this super
important skill of resilience, of growth, of truly being able to transition through any change and
know that you're going to be okay. Change is only overwhelming if you don't understand
the larger context of what is happening
and why it takes time.
It is so easy to get overwhelmed by your own emotions
if you don't see the bigger picture,
that it takes time to go from the snow falling
to plowing this new path.
And it's gonna feel like you're pushing through something.
This is normal.
And so I wanted to start by validating both for you
and for me, I'm reminding myself of this every day,
that there is a simple truth about life.
All change is hard.
Because it doesn't just feel like boom, you're a snowplow. It
feels more like, oh my gosh, this just happened and now I'm knee-deep in snow
and I only have a spoon. That's what it feels like. But you're going to keep
reminding yourself that it's supposed to feel like this. And eventually with a
little bit of time and continuing to push yourself forward, you're
going to be plowing a new path.
Because any change in your life is just requiring your body to learn new patterns in life.
That's it.
I'll give you an example of what your kid is dealing with right now and what you're
probably dealing with right now.
Let's just talk about the five senses.
One of the reasons why it is so overwhelming
for kids to transition to college
or transition into the military
or transition into a full-time job right out of high school
if they moved out and they're not living with you
is because it's sensory overload.
Every smell, every sound, the food tastes different,
the texture of the rug they walk on,
the fact that they're now in a room sleeping with a human being that they don't really know, and maybe that person
doesn't even sleep through the night, so they're walking in and out of the room. This is sensory
overload. That's why it feels like you're in the middle of a snowstorm with a spoon. You're just
figuring out how to absorb all this. And that's why this visual helps me personally, because I'm like, oh, this makes sense.
I'm just plowing new pathways.
I'm learning new behavior.
I'm allowing my mind and body to absorb something new.
And for me, the sense that is just kind of an overdrive right now that's unnerving is
sound.
Or should I say the lack thereof.
It is eerie how quiet it is in this house. Unnerving is sound. Or should I say the lack thereof?
It is eerie how quiet it is in this house. I mean, I used to think our dogs were annoying
because they bark too much.
Now I cannot wait for them to bark
because it's a sign of life.
And it feels unnerving because it is unnerving.
Let me just think about that word, unnerve.
Your nervous system knew what it felt like
to live in a house when your kids were there.
If you are unlearning patterns, you're unnerving it, right?
Kind of cool if you think about it that way.
So it's appropriate that you're not used to it.
And that's all that unnerving means.
You're not used to it. And that's all that unnerving means. You're not used to it yet. And I'm going to
warn you and me, we got to be very careful about the words that we're using right now.
Because it sounds very different to say to yourself, this quiet is so unfing. Versus, I'm learning how to be with the quiet
during this transition.
Do you feel the difference?
One set of words actually jacks up
and amplifies the feeling like something's wrong.
The other validates that you're going
through a mentally healthy body response
to learning how to be with something new.
That's all that this is, is a new pattern. And that's why I'm sharing this larger context with you. And I also want to remind you of something. You've been doing this change thing your whole life.
You are built to learn new patterns. You have done this before, which is why you need to
just keep reminding yourself, just like I had to remind myself these last couple days, I know how
to do this. I know this is going to take time, just because it feels bad doesn't mean it is bad. I will
get used to this. Because what happened for me is right after we dropped off our son, we move him into his room, we hop back in the car, we drive back home, we had a big dinner out,
and then we went to bed.
And I then had a super busy week at work to distract myself.
And then over the weekend, Chris and I went away for the night to celebrate our 28th wedding
anniversary.
And then we drive home on Sunday, and I walked into the house on Sunday after dropping him
off in a whirlwind week at work and distracting myself.
And I'll tell you what, we cracked open that door.
It was scary quiet.
Talk about unnerving. And I looked at Chris and I thought, this is
what everyone's talking about. I felt the emptiness in my bones.
And then the emotions started to swirl. And as my emotions are
swirling, and that emptiness is taking hold and I'm letting myself just become gripped in the emptiness,
I turned to Chris like a lunatic and I'm like, I don't care what it takes.
I'm not going to live alone on this mountain. If our kids move to New York City or Los Angeles, I'm moving to them.
And God bless Chris. He smiled and he looked at me and he kind of, you know, cocked his head, the little compassion.
He's like, it's okay, Mel.
We can move wherever you want to move.
And this is why you got to be careful with your words.
Because if I had felt that sense of emptiness and I simply just reminded myself, this is exactly what I should be feeling.
Because I'm just learning a new pattern in my life.
And just because it feels uncomfortable doesn't mean it's bad, Mel.
You're stepping into a new chapter.
You're stepping into the snow with your spoon.
But every single day,
you're going to make headway because you were built to do this.
Your body knows how to do this.
That's why it's busy learning new patterns.
And just because you're not used to it yet, doesn't mean it's going to be bad.
And just because your kid isn't used to being at college yet, doesn't mean it's going to
be bad.
In fact, I don't think it's going to be bad at all.
If you allow yourself to really lean in, it's gonna be amazing.
And can I level with you about something
and this like emptiness and silence thing?
The truth is when your kids were home,
when they were a senior in high school, did you see them?
I mean, when Oakley was a senior in high school,
he would leave first thing in the morning
and grunt at me as he was leaving out the door.
He would come back after practice. He would cook himself something fast to eat and grunt at me as he was leaving out the door. He would come back after practice.
He would cook himself something fast to eat
and then he would be up in his room,
either playing video games or doing his homework.
I mean, half the time when I made dinner,
he's like, I'm not hungry, I already ate.
So was he really around?
Not really, he was living his own life.
That's what he was doing
and that's what he was supposed to be doing.
That's what he was doing. And that's what he was supposed to be doing.
But standing there, easy to forget the context.
And I had a moment, and I'm sure it's not the last moment I'm going to have,
where I just looked at Chris, I'm like, oh my God, it's just you and me.
And I also want to share something about that moment.
Because this is also important.
When I had that like, oh my gosh moment, or something about that moment. Because this is also important.
When I had that like, oh my gosh moment,
what do you think my first impulse was? In that moment of discomfort,
in that moment of experiencing the silence
or the emptiness, what do you think my first impulse was?
It was to reach out to Oakley.
It was to reach out and text and be like,
hey, how was your day?
How were classes?
Have you met anybody?
This is also normal, but this is an old pattern.
This is a pattern that is programmed into your body
and brain for 18 years minimum,
because for 18 years minimum, you have seen this kid,
you have talked to this kid, you have been near them,
you have reached out to them,
you have filled your boredom by connecting with them,
you have had fun by being with them,
you are so used to doing this
that I want to normalize this urge that you have
that in any moment of sadness or boredom
or uncomfortableness, you're gonna wanna reach out to them.
And while this is normal, I wanna highlight
that this is an old pattern
that in the first month of them being gone,
you and I have got to catch this
and we have to break ourselves of this pattern.
Can you reach out to your kids?
Of course, and you should.
But in the first 30 days,
I want you to try a little experiment.
This is something I'm doing with myself.
It's hard to do, but Holy Cow is this helping.
Every single time you have an urge to fill time
by texting your kid, try to wait 30 minutes,
just in the beginning, because you have to watch out
for how often you're gonna try to fix your boredom
by reaching out to them.
Happened to me.
Here I am, I'm sitting down with Chris on that Sunday night.
We're sitting at the island in the kitchen
and I'm realizing this feels weird.
I'm not used to it just being the two of us,
but I'm not gonna reach out to Oakley for 30 minutes.
I literally have to sit on my hands
and come up with things to talk to Chris about,
because I'm like, I can't reach out to him.
I'm just, I'm reaching for something right now
because I'm uncomfortable.
And if they're not texting you, good.
That means they're off doing what they need to be doing.
They're off with their spoon in the snow,
plowing a new path forward.
For crying out loud, don't interrupt them.
You need to learn for yourself
how to tolerate this new normal.
Your kid is not the solution to your emotional discomfort.
Now say that again. Your adult child is not the solution to your emotional discomfort.
Now say that again.
Your adult child is not the solution
to your emotional discomfort.
And I want to prove to you why this advice is so important
and why it's critical for you to try this
in the first 30 days.
Remember how I said earlier on
that one of the coolest things about this big life transition
is that you
and your child are going through the exact same parallel emotional path and the exact
same process of transitioning into a new chapter of your life. It's cool, right?
So let me ask you a question. Every time your child gets nervous or feels a little sad or
feels a little lonely,
which is gonna happen a lot the first month,
do you want them to call you?
I'm dead serious about this.
If every time they don't know what to do
with the two hours they have a free time after their classes,
do you want them to be calling you?
Of course not.
What do you want them to do?
You want them to be calling you? Of course not. What do you want them to do? You want them to spread their wings and boldly fly out the door of their dorm room and lean
into their new life.
That's what you want for them.
Of course it is.
How do you teach them to do that?
By modeling them.
That's how you do it.
And by the way, if they called you every single day crying and saying that they were sad and they were lonely
and they can't make friends, what would you tell them?
At some point you would tell them that, yes, this is hard,
but at some point you need to hang up the phone.
You need to get out of the dorm room.
You need to go walk around the green.
You need to get to the cafeteria
and go sit with somebody that is sitting alone
and you need to start to put yourself out there.
And you need to hear the same thing.
Why is change hard?
Because you have to go through it.
Nobody can do it for you.
And so the next time that you or I have one of those waves,
and we are gonna have those waves,
I want you to remember,
this is just the process of change in my body. All my five senses are unlearning the
way that I used to do things. They're unlearning my old coping mechanisms. This is why it's
unnerving because I am unnerving these patterns just like my child has to. We are all knee deep
in the snow together with the spoon but little little, as these waves come and go,
which is normal, you are making that path in a new direction.
And so a couple more points that are just broad strokes
that really help me when I'm going through a moment
where change is hard.
Number one, it's just gonna take time.
You gotta give it a month or two.
In fact, I think that's why most parents' weekends
are always scheduled about a month
after your kid gets there.
It's scheduled for both you and them
to have a forced separation.
Why?
Because you need time to settle into a new routine.
It just is the process of your body
learning a whole new pattern.
You know, I remember once,
I was talking to a head of one of these,
like summer sleep away camps,
and he said something really interesting to me.
He said that most sleep away camps
last for at least three and a half weeks,
because it takes most kids at least three weeks to settle into the
new routine, to move through the very normal experience of being homesick.
And being homesick can be a good thing.
It means you miss something that you love, and that's a great thing.
And you're both going to feel it.
But here's the thing you don't think about, is that oftentimes it's harder for you
to move through this transition
because you're still living in the same physical environment
of the old chapter.
Whereas your kids are now surrounded
by all these kids their age
and having this unbelievable new opportunity of learning.
Literally, an entire academic community exists
just to support them.
How cool is that?
I mean, if you and I could trade places with our kids
and go to an adult university, be like, camp,
wouldn't that be a blast to be with a bunch of people
in their 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s?
That's why you need the same advice
that you're gonna give them,
which is college is what you make of it. And so is this next chapter of your life. And if that nest feels empty,
it's your responsibility to fill it up. It's what you make of it. It's about you.
Change doesn't happen over time. It's what you do with that time that matters. And so if that
calendar of yours feels empty, you got to fill it up. This is an opportunity
for you to take responsibility and make this next chapter of your life better. The fact that your
kids are in college becoming their best self just opened up all this time and energy for you to
focus back on yourself. And you not only need to fill your life up because it's going to make you
happier and it's going to help you feel more confident.
You need to do it because this chapter is going to become
one of the best chapters of your life.
And you also need to do it because if you don't,
this change is going to be even harder for you.
So you know how there's that exercise class
they haven't been able to get to
because you've been so busy getting your kid
ready to go to college? Now you got the time. Those friends that you haven't
seen, that you've been wanting to see, you got the time. The class you've always
wanted to take, the skills or hobbies that you've wanted to pursue, you got the
time. You want to get better at cooking? Fantastic, do it. What projects do you
want to take on around the house? You got the time. I mean it's probably a little
too soon to convert their bedroom into your home office
or your craft in,
because they're coming home in a couple months.
But there are things around the house
you have not had time to take care of.
And here's a good rule of thumb,
other than it's going to take a couple months
and it's your responsibility to fill up your life.
A good rule of thumb that I live by
is you got to leave your house once a day.
For me personally, one of the things that I'm excited about, I'm excited about reconnecting with friends and having way more fun in my social life because it's going to make me happy.
And second, it's filling up the calendar. So I have something to look forward to and you need
to do the same thing. I'm feeling really excited right now because I have friends coming almost
every weekend for the next four weeks. Why? Because I reached out and asked them to come.
I've made plans to see somebody in Nashville in November. I've already made plans for March.
This is a whole different world. I mean, I'm no longer tethered to a high school calendar and a
sports schedule and travel teams on the weekends. And this is, I guess, why I hate the term empty
nest. It makes you focus on the nest, when you should be focused on your wings.
So how about you spread your own wings and you fly on down to that CrossFit gym that
you keep hearing your friends talk about or flap those wings and get your rear end to
the library where there's book clubs or a language club you can join.
And by the way, if you've been the one cooking dinner for everybody, guess what?
You can make whatever you want.
You've always wanted to try being vegetarian.
There's nobody there to complain.
Now's the time.
If you'd like to eat earlier, you can eat earlier.
Everything is there for you to explore
if you get out of that nest and take flight.
And so I hope you're starting to recognize
you're not trapped where you are.
You have wings.
Spread them. Because the only way you're starting to recognize you're not trapped where you are. You have wings.
Spread them.
Because the only way you're going to make this next chapter of your life amazing is
by leaning into it.
And that advice goes for all of us.
But as I was really thinking about my experience, I realized that there are three specific challenges
that can come up during this particular life change
and this transition of kids heading off to college, that depending upon what's happening
in your life personally, these three challenges can make the change more difficult.
And so I'm going to address them individually.
And you do not want to miss this.
So I'm going to pause so we can hear a word from our amazing sponsors.
And while you're listening to our sponsors, share this with all your friends or parents.
They are going to love you for sharing this conversation with them and do not go anywhere
because you absolutely need to hear what these three challenges are.
You're probably facing one of them.
And I've got specific advice for how to meet these challenges when we return.
Stay with me.
Hey, it's your friend Mel Robbins.
I am so excited to be spending this time.
I don't feel so alone now that I'm talking to you.
I hope you feel the same way.
We've been talking about transitioning your kids to college
and coming home to a house that feels empty.
How to turn this into an opportunity,
how to help yourself move through
this very normal process of changing.
And before we went to break,
I said that there are three challenges
that come up over and over again
for people during this exact period of time.
These challenges are normal, they are very common.
I saw it over and over in the inbox.
I also see it happening with friends of mine
and family members of mine.
So let me tell you what those three things are
and then you and I are gonna go through them one by one.
And the first additional challenge is that
if your kids leave for college and you realize,
oh my gosh, my kids were my entire life, I have no sense of purpose without them here.
The second challenge is that they leave and now you have to face relationship issues,
whether it's issues in a marriage or issues in your relationship to being single.
And the third challenge is what happens when you're moving through this hard transition
and your child is really struggling.
Now these are all extremely common challenges.
If you're facing any of them, you're not alone.
And you have everything that you need
within you to not only meet this challenge,
but to rise to it.
But the first thing that I want you to do is to recognize
that this is in fact an additional issue that you're dealing
with right now and that it compounds the nature of how you
move through this transition.
And it also requires you to do something.
You have to take full responsibility
for how you're gonna show up
and move through this and face it head on.
Because just like nobody can spread your wings
and fly for you,
nobody can face these challenges for you either.
So don't be surprised that if the kids have left
and the issues that you've been avoiding or ignoring
are now kind of adding to this sense of emptiness
or fear that you have, this is very common
because the emptiness may not just be the house.
It can be the sense that along the way,
you lost a little bit of yourself.
I mean, it is so easy to get caught up
in the role of being a parent and caring for everyone else,
that you forget that you're also a person
who has very real needs.
And this new chapter of your life is an opportunity
for you to truly understand what your needs are,
to learn how to put yourself first while still being supported of the people you love,
and do the work to create one of the most exciting and fulfilling chapters of your life
yet.
So let's talk about these three challenges and the opportunity that they create for you
to become more of who you're meant to be.
And that very first challenge is when you realize
in this emptiness that your entire sense of purpose
was your children.
And I gotta just reaffirm something I already told you.
You earned a gold medal.
You parented the heck out of those kids.
And I love it when I see people
who are bragging about their kids
or they went to this college or do it.
I'm like, good job, mom, good job, dad,
good job, grandma, grandpa, aunts, uncles, everybody.
And I'm saying it to you too.
And now I wanna say something else to you and to me.
You are not put on this earth to be a wife or a husband or a mother or a father.
Those are roles that you play.
They are just one of the amazing things that you do in life.
And you did that role so well and you're going to continue to do an incredible job.
Because remember what I said, that you're on a parallel path with your kids?
One of the things that your son and daughter is going to learn,
whether it's in the college experience
or going right into the workforce
or going into the military,
is they're going to learn that they are more than a son or a daughter.
So if you feel like you've been lost in your identity of being a parent, this is such a common experience.
And it's easy to do. I mean, think about like, you just, it's the logistics and the carpooling and the team sports and the college shirts and the friends and the packing and the this and the that and the forms and the financial aid and being there and attending all the games and supporting everyone.
And I have some news for you.
You're not done with that.
I mean, just because they left the nest
doesn't mean they're not coming back.
And as they get older, what I have found
is that the problems just get bigger and more expensive.
However, what I'm seeing with friends of mine
and what I'm seeing a lot of in the inbox at MelRobbins.com
is that this lack of purpose is a really big
part of the challenge that you're facing when your kids leave.
And that's what's making this transition even harder.
And maybe you're having a moment of honesty with yourself.
Maybe you're thinking, this is something I've avoided dealing with for a long time. And I knew this day is coming. And
now it's here. So let's talk about how you find purpose in
this moment. Because everything that we already discussed about
change being hard, and the process of your body learning
new patterns, that still applies.
That experience of learning how to be with that quiet
or that deafening silence, there's no avoiding that.
That's just you having to adjust to new patterns
and you gotta give it a month or two.
But when you lack purpose, there's a second thing that's sort of looming in the background
that you feel.
It's this sense of paralysis that you don't know what to do.
It's a lack of direction because you either are not sure how to move forward
or maybe you loved your old life so much
you don't really want to have to.
You're kind of sad that this part of your life is over.
Getting your kids into college was your North Star.
And I'm pointing to this and validating it
because there are two things you have to do
at the same time if purpose is missing. First, you're things you have to do at the same time if purpose
is missing.
First, you're going to have to go through the process of managing change.
You're going to have to give yourself the grace and the time and use language to affirm
that you're just going through the process of learning new patterns.
This feeling is going to be temporary.
You are built to do this and it is absolutely going to get better and better.
But you also have to do a second thing at the same time,
which is address the problem
of having a lack of purpose head on.
And even though I said problem, it's not a problem.
This is a huge opportunity.
And I want to address this in two camps.
First, I want to talk to you if you already have a sense of what your purpose might be.
Maybe you've been putting off a career as a realtor or waiting to write that book or to go back to school or to pursue your art.
Or, you know, there was something that you were kind of waiting on until they left.
And I got to say something, whatever it is, you spread those wings and you start flapping baby, and you start flying toward it. That is your job to leave the nest every
day and fly a little bit forward toward that thing. And don't you ever, ever, ever say
you're too old. Don't you dare let your friends Mel Robbins catch you saying that. I want
to remind you, I started this podcast when I was 54 years old, and I had two kids that had left the nest.
And so if I can do it, you can start something new too.
So flap those wings.
Because really stepping into that purpose,
grabbing that spoon, spreading those wings,
and starting to shovel that snow in a new direction,
it's gonna improve your life.
It will fill things up.
So if you know, go.
However, I'm seeing there are a lot of you
who do not know what to fill that empty space up with
and not knowing just leaves you more paralyzed.
So I've got a couple specific things that I want you to do
if you have no clue what direction to
head in.
You're standing at the edge of the nest, you got your wings out, you're like, what direction
do I fly?
Get me out of here.
I got to do something.
Here's number one.
Ask your kids.
The next time they call home, say, hey, buddy, I got a question for you.
If you got to choose what I were to focus
the next five years of my life, dedicate my life to,
what would you recommend I do?
You know me better than anyone else.
And by the way, if you're listening to me right now
and you have a parent who hasn't figured this out,
whether they just dropped you off at college
or they just got a divorce,
will you send them this episode, please?
I know they send you episodes of this podcast all the time.
This is one of those that you can return the favor
and say, see, here you go, mom or dad,
you need to listen to this.
And you can also tell them,
I think you really should go back to school, mom.
I think you really should like do your art, mom.
Dad, I think you really should hike the Appalachian Trail.
Whatever it is that's in your heart, tell them.
Give them permission.
Second, there's a foolproof way
that you can figure out a sense of direction
if you have no idea what your purpose is.
Simply focus on improving yourself.
If at any moment in your life,
you don't know what direction to head in, turn inward.
Your purpose is you.
All those things you've never had time for,
taking care of yourself, walking every day,
getting in better shape, being kinder to yourself,
locking in a great morning routine,
listening to podcasts, reading a book a month,
getting the kitten you've always wanted.
If you wanted a cat, I don't know what you want.
I'm just making things up here.
Absolutely anything, absolutely anything
that helps you be a better you,
that is the most important purpose
you could ever have in life.
Because over and over and over again,
what I've discovered is that when I make bettering myself
my purpose, I always bump into something bigger than me.
And that brings me to the third thing that you can do
if you feel a sense of lack of purpose.
Go volunteer.
Go volunteer.
If you can't be of service to yourself,
be of service to someone else.
My husband is a death doula and he volunteers for hospice.
And I'll tell you something,
sitting with someone at the end of their life will certainly wake you up and make you see you have not died and it is time to stop acting
like you have. Helping someone else will give you a sense of purpose immediately and it will also
help you have a much bigger perspective about what you have in your life. not what you've lost, what you have gained, what is available to you in your life
outside of just that role of being a parent.
And it also brings me to the second pause I need to take
so we can give our amazing sponsors
a chance to share a word with you.
I don't want you to go anywhere
because the second challenge that we're gonna talk about
is the relationship issues that can come up,
whether you're married or you're single,
and then we're gonna get to what you do
when your kids are really struggling.
All of that after a short break, stay with me,
I'll be waiting for you when we return.
(*upbeat music*)
Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins. And let's jump into that second challenge
that is incredibly common to face during this transition to moving kids to college and you
being in a house and feeling empty. And that is that when the kids leave, the relationship
issues that you've ignored are suddenly right in your face. And so I'm gonna address both relationship issues
when you're single and relationship issues
in your marriage that bubble up once the kids leave.
First, let's cover what happens
when the empty nest reveals rotten eggs.
And I'm not talking about your spouse's farts.
I'm talking about your relationship.
Something stinks about it. And the problem is you and your spouse have kickedarts. I'm talking about your relationship. Something stinks about it.
And the problem is you and your spouse have kicked this down the field. These are the
conversations you've been avoiding. The issues that you knew you needed to deal with have been
swept under the rug and now you're tripping over them. You stuck it out, but now that everybody's
gone, there's no running from them. What you've avoided is staring at you in the face
and they're usually wearing a really ugly pair of sweatpants
when they're doing it.
You know what I'm talking about?
Because the things that you ignore
always become the battles you have to fight later.
And the day has come.
But I'm here to tell you, you're gonna win.
It is so common to have this oh my God moment
when the kids leave.
Because you haven't been in a marriage,
you've been in a throuple or a quadruple or a quintuplet
because you and your spouse have always had these kids
running around and in between and all over the place
and distracting you.
And now that it's just the two of you,
you get to decide whether or not you're going to approach
any challenges like amazing opportunity or
a deal breaker.
So the question is, what do you do if your relationship feels like roommates?
Or you realize there are some big issues here we've avoided all along.
Or maybe you're realizing, I don't even like this person.
I'm not sure I want to be married anymore.
These are all really good questions.
And in order to get to the right answer for you,
I want to start with a simple truth. People only change when they feel like changing.
So the single best thing that you can do right now is realize you are not going to change your
spouse, period. Only your spouse can do that for themselves. The only thing that you can control
can do that for themselves. The only thing that you can control
is what you decide to change about yourself,
how you show up, what you wanna work on.
Because a healthy relationship requires
two things to be present.
It requires two people who want it to work
and two people who are both willing
to put in the work to make it work.
And there is no doubt in my mind
that if you and your partner want to work on it
and you're both willing to do the work,
you can make your relationship amazing.
That's what my husband and I are doing.
I am not leaving this to chance.
I called in the heavies.
We went to see a couples therapist and it's really helped
because even though our relationship was good,
we lost part of our connection
because of the demands of parenting.
And I think it happens to everyone.
And I heard this thing recently that was so amazing.
I heard somebody say, I'm on my second marriage.
It's just with the same person.
Isn't that kind of cool to think that you could create
a second marriage with the same
person? I freaking love that. And here's the thing though, if they're not willing to put in the work,
then you got to get honest with yourself, because you should assume they're never going to change.
But I didn't say you couldn't change. See, when you invest in yourself,
you can become a happier you. Do not focus on your spouse being happier. They are not the source of
your happiness, especially if they're not willing to do the work to get better. The fastest way to
make your relationship happier is to make yourself happier within your own life. And when you do that, life has a funny way of sorting out the relationship.
Because now that you're happy,
your relationship does not have to be
the sole source of your happiness.
And another thing happens when you're happier,
you raise your standards for what you accept
and allow in your life.
So now let's talk about being single
and how that deafening silence
that happens during
this transition will become magnified if you're already feeling lonely.
And you have to take this very seriously because you cannot expect friendship to just fall
out of the sky.
You cannot expect a relationship to just land in your lap.
You have to take responsibility for creating it.
You have to take responsibility for creating it. You have to take responsibility
for creating your social life and your love life. And isolating yourself right now, it is only going
to magnify the loneliness you feel. And if you think change is hard now, it's going to be way
harder in two months when you're sitting in your house alone and your son or daughter is no longer
calling or texting you because they leaned into their life when you didn't.
And as your friend, I'm not going to water down what I need to say to you.
Everyone is struggling with adult friendship.
You got to stop feeling sorry for yourself and you got to get to work.
And you have to take this seriously because friendship matters and you deserve amazing friends. In fact, I have done a ton of episodes on adult friendships
because I've struggled with this topic recently
in my own life.
And the episodes, they're all gonna be linked
in the resources.
And as soon as you are done listening to this episode,
you better giddy up down to those resources
and clicky click on those links
and cue up all those episodes and listen to them
and then make a plan.
Follow the advice to AT.
Because while your child is off making new friends
and going to parties and watching games and learning
and having all these new experiences, so shall you.
But only if you force yourself to.
Which brings me to that rule I showed earlier,
get out of your house once a day.
Do not allow yourself to learn
a pattern of becoming a hermit. And I'm also going to tell you that my next book comes out,
it's called The Let Them Theory on January 1. And you better have that puppy in your hands
because there's an entire section about using The Let Them Theory to create the best friendships
of your life. I wrote it for you. The bottom line is the best chapter of your life
is beginning right now.
Yes, the first 30 days are gonna be a little rocky.
You're gonna get through it.
But the most amazing people in your life,
they're ahead of you.
They're not behind you.
You haven't met them yet.
And you're gonna meet them after your kids leave.
And isn't that exciting to think about?
And you wanna know what's even more exciting?
The best years of your love life happen after your kids leave.
And that brings me to the third challenge
that can make this transition in life harder.
What do you do when your kids are really struggling with this?
You're doing the work.
You're filling up your calendar.
You're flying out of the nest
and down to your new exercise class.
You're prioritizing yourself.
You're making new friends.
That little spoon has become a shovel.
You are plowing forward in a healthy way.
You wake up one day, you're like, holy cow,
I'm actually enjoying this.
But your child is not.
They're calling home all the time.
They're homesick.
They want a transfer.
And by the way, this doesn't just happen to freshmen.
Every major change that your child goes through,
they're gonna struggle with it.
In our household, for example,
sophomore year was the disastrous year for one of our kids.
For another one of our kids, it was junior year of college that blew.
And don't even get me started about how difficult the transition is once they graduate and they
have to enter the real world.
But the question is, how do you handle an adult child who is using you as a human life
raft to keep them afloat
while the waters of their life feel rocky.
When a kid struggles with this transition,
it sounds exactly the same.
I hate it here.
Everybody has friends.
I haven't found my people.
Nobody likes me.
Everybody's already like clicked up and grouped up.
This isn't my place.
I'm not having, I miss you all the time.
I hate being alone in my room.
I really want to transfer.
This is not the place for me. I guarantee you all the time. I hate being alone in my room. I really want to transfer.
This is not the place for me.
I guarantee you, if these words are coming out of their mouth, if the tears are falling
down their cheeks, I want to tell you what they're doing when they're not crying with
you on the phone.
They're spending a lot of time in their dorm room alone and a lot of time on their phone
looking at what their high school friends are doing.
And if you're the kind of person who gets sucked into this,
you're in deep trouble, and so are they.
Because it's one thing to support someone
as they're finding their wings and learning to fly.
It's another thing to leap out of your nest
and try to grab them in midair
and lift them up with your own wings.
Some little birds need to hit the ground
in order to take flight.
It's that struggle and going through it. That's what they need. It's learning how to face a challenging situation and become stronger than the things that you fear in your head.
Remember I said that the hardest thing about change is that you have to go through it.
And it is a difficult experience in life
to watch someone struggle through the process of change
because you can't do it for them.
But maybe your child needs to cry it out
for a week or a month and be alone in their dorm room until
they realize they're sick of being sad and they finally hit the bottom of that curve
and they head out and up and into the quad. You know they can do this? Renowned Harvard
psychiatrist Dr. Waldinger said to me,
do not shield the people you love
from the consequences of what they choose.
They chose to go to college.
You didn't force them there.
You didn't drag them there
and shackle them to their dorm bed.
They wanted to go.
The problem is you care so much
that you then try to solve their problems.
And here's the big picture reason why this is a problem.
Every time you do that, you're training them to expect you to rescue them.
And I'm going to give you a really subtle example of how this is playing out in my own life right now,
and how I'm trying to remind myself that rescuing is not what I'm supposed to do.
I'm supposed to support them in their own problem solving.
So when Oak was about to head off to school,
there were all these immunization forms
that we needed to find.
It was this whole song and dance.
And we finally got the email from his doc
and we emailed them to him.
And I guess it's like a big deal
because he needs to get them submitted for his meal plan.
I don't know what's going on.
He calls Chris, he calls me, he calls Chris, he calls me.
And I finally get on the phone with him and he's like,
I don't know what to do with these immunization forms.
The old me, you know what I would have done?
I'll tell you what, I would have spread those wings.
I would have flapped right to the phone.
I would have been busy trying to do it.
I would have handled it.
I would have spent hours tracking down the right person.
Then I would have tried to log on to some portal
that I didn't have access to in order to be in there.
But you know what I did instead?
I stayed in the nest.
And I said, well, what do you think you should do?
That's a question you should ask your kid all the time.
The next time they call you crying,
the next time they call to complain or unload, listen for a little bit and they'll be like, what do you think you should ask your kid all the time. The next time they call you crying, the next time they call to complain or unload,
listen for a little bit and they'll be like,
what do you think you should do?
Oh, all your friends from high school
are having way more fun than you are.
What do you think you should do?
Oh, you think you're at the wrong school?
What do you think you should do?
Oh, you don't have any friends?
What do you think you should do?
They know what they should do.
They just don't wanna do it.
So I asked Oakley, what do you think they should do. They just don't want to do it. So I asked Oakley,
what do you think you should do?
I don't know. I said,
well, who sent you the immunization forms?
My doctor. Great. Are there doctors on campus,
say at the Student Health Center?
Yes. Do you think maybe you could walk there and show
them the email of the immunization
forms and ask for help? Yeah. I said, that's a great idea. And if you run into any problems,
let us know. I didn't solve it. I supported him in solving it for himself. Big difference.
Because imagine if I had said, no problem, Oak, I got it. And then I spent all these hours figuring it out for him.
Guess what happens the next time he has something
that he's not quite sure what he should do.
Like let's say he decides he doesn't want
to be a business major.
Instead of asking himself, what should I do?
Instead of him answering it for himself,
maybe I should go into the dean of students.
Maybe I should walk into the registrar's office.
If I keep solving his problems,
what he's gonna, he's gonna call me.
That's gonna be the answer to everything.
And one of the things to keep in mind
is that you're training your child to think for themselves.
You're training them to do the hard things
and to face their fears so that they can learn,
they can rely on themselves
instead of constantly checking in with you.
Your kids are way smarter
than you are giving them credit for.
And you know how they figure it out?
They figure it out faster
when you're not constantly on speed dial.
And the great thing about college
is that there's so many resources available to them. People's job is to help them solve problems. I mean, maybe that's why it costs
so much. There's so much help there. And unless you're the registrar at your kid's university,
you don't know the answer. So untrain them and untrain yourself from this pattern of treating
you like a human Google.
And let's take this a little bit further.
But let's just say that your kid is really struggling.
That was me.
When I was in my first semester of college, I had a full-blown homesickness, panic attack,
mental health breakdown.
And this was way before people had a word for what I was feeling.
We didn't call those kinds of feelings anxiety.
I'm sure people were just like, boy, she's weird.
Glad she's not my roommate.
What a freak.
And the best advice that I have heard on the topic of anxiety comes from another Harvard
professor, Dr. Luana Marquez.
The more you allow someone to avoid the things that they are anxious to do,
the bigger their anxiety gets.
And this is really important because one of the big things with anxiety and depression is rumination,
which is constantly thinking about or talking about your problems.
And the reason why it is a bad, scary habit to get into where you are ruminating on something
is that the more someone talks about their problems and how they feel and the sadness and the this and the that,
the more entrenched they become in it.
And if you personally struggle with anxiety and now your kid is showing signs of it,
this boundary is going to be very difficult for you to do
because it's gonna feel like you're abandoning your kid
and you're throwing them to the wolves
and they're drowning out there and you need to rescue them.
No, this is a moment where you are reminding your child
that they have wings and it's time to use them This is a moment where you are reminding your child
that they have wings and it's time to use them and to trust them even though they're scared to.
And until they let go and turn toward the thing
they're scared to go do, whether it's go meet people,
go talk to your RA, go walk down to the student health center
and talk to a therapist, go explore areas of your campus.
For crying out loud, get off your phone
and your life is not where your high school friends
are at their schools, it's where you are.
Every time you tell them to do that,
you are encouraging them to fly, that they are ready,
even though they don't feel ready,
even though they don't feel ready,
even though they don't want to.
This was certainly true for me.
My mom entertained my daily collect phone calls
from the payphone and the dorm hallway
for exactly two weeks.
And then finally one day, I'll tell you what,
she threw a bird fit.
You wanna talk about an empty nest theme?
Bird fit.
She was so frustrated with me and she was like,
stop calling me and go make some friends. You're not in freaking jail. If you keep calling me,
I'm going to tell you what's going to happen. When you come home for Thanksgiving, you're staying
home. You're going to community college. So get off this phone and get your butt out of that dorm
and go make some friends. Click.
She kicked me out of that nest with that phone call. It was the tough love that I needed, but I'll tell you what,
by that afternoon, I was a completely different person
because I no longer had her as an outlet
to avoid what I knew I needed to be doing,
which was putting myself out there
and making myself feel the discomfort
and introducing myself to people
and just moving through the normal experience of change,
which is hard for all of us.
Why?
Because you have to go through it.
And every single time you entertain that call,
you're making them feel like their emotions
and their fear are correct.
You're making them believe they can't handle it,
that this isn't the right school,
that their people aren't here.
And so validate how they're feeling for sure. But as they're done crying it out, you have to say, what do you think you could do right now? What's one thing that would make you feel better?
And every time you do that, you know what you're showing them? You're showing them that you believe in them.
You believe in their ability to face this
and that they've got their wings.
They just need to start flapping them
and they'll learn how to fly.
And you wanna know something really cool
is that yesterday as I was sitting down
and I was trying to kind of just process the experience
and figure out what I wanted to say to you,
I got a text from a friend of mine.
Her name is Kathy Adzich.
And you want to know how I met her?
Her daughter and my daughter lived together at USC.
They were roommates.
We bonded over the experience and now we're empty nesters.
We launched our little birds out to Los Angeles
and we've remained really good friends and stayed in touch,
even though our daughters have since graduated.
And she was writing to me, like so many of you do,
just yesterday, asking me to cover the topic
of dealing with an empty nest.
And I was like, Kathy, this is,
I love it when the universe does this.
This is a sign, I love it when the universe does this.
This is a sign, I cannot believe you're texting me.
I'm working on an episode about that exact topic
that I am going to record in less than 24 hours.
And then I said to her,
why don't you just put a few thoughts
about what you're thinking about,
what you're struggling with into a text with me?
Because I would love to hear about your experience and that's going
to help me make this episode even better. And I'll tell you what, my friend Kathy, she
not only shared her thoughts with me, but she wrote me such a beautiful text that it
reads like a poem. And I want to share it with you. Here's what she wrote.
If you've ever examined a bird's nest from its beginning to end,
it truly mirrors parenting.
A day in, day out focus with time to create,
using sticks, random items, and possibly some kind of concocted clay that we call home.
In a location we feel comfortable to stash away what's precious, our babies.
Once developing, we flit in and out for work and to-dos, then we provide warmth to help them grow.
Our body in parenting, while hunting for food like groceries and preparing affordable nutrition,
the unending meals, as our young gain their feathers, voice, size, and strength. Then somehow, against our desire to shield,
we intuit the need to nudge our deeply coveted offspring
over the tattered rim of aged twigs,
only to watch each one flap wildly and land a bit hard,
possibly quite abrupt,
as they take new, unsteady steps away from our safety. As the nest empties one by one,
they aren't perfectly prepared. With each vacancy there is more space. Is this new empty
a calm quiet, a healthy shift, a sad loss, a thankful prayer, or a lonely void?
loss, a thankful prayer, or a lonely void. Each nest holds its own intensely personal story.
Some chicks needed to go sooner, others much later, some older, others younger.
Some nests just held one, others were stuffed with many.
But eventually, each nest often becomes empty, with only
remnants of what once was a scattering of old baby feathers,
pieces of broken shell, dislodged twigs, dusty hardness
and weathered debris. A clear sign that it was messy, but we
gave it our all. The best each of us knew,
with the minimal tools we had.
Alone now I sit, exhausted of the racing schedule.
Now with time to read and walk,
yet a guttural ache misses the noise, the mess and the warmth.
I'm anxious and guilty that I find a welcome peace in stillness and yet can't deny the
loneliness of the unknown tomorrows.
Ironically I'm now standing at the edge of the empty memory-filled nest, thinking to
my wise old self? Do I replace some of the twigs,
get some new clay and find solace in this present spot?
Just spend my days moving my eyes about,
engaging the neighbors when I desire
while anticipating grandchick's return?
Or do I take a big breath, spread these yearning wings,
and soar to different heights,
discovering fresh branches in which to land?
Or shoot off for a short adventurous glide,
making my way back here to the same comfortable
body-worn nest and chirp quietly with each sunset?
Who knows?
What I do know, I'm good enough just the
way I am, whether I'm doing or being or laughing or crying,
changing or stagnant. Because right now I'm flapping wildly
until I land on these newly found wise and seasoned feet.
Doesn't it make you feel better to know
that we are going through this together?
I know it makes me feel better
knowing that you're here with me.
And that's why I said at the very beginning,
the conversation today was gonna be one of those ones
that I was having both with myself
at the same time that I was talking to you. As we move through this transition together and we hit so many life
transitions together, we got to keep reminding one another we got this because we do. And I also
want to remind you in case your son or daughter forgets to call today, someone else doesn't tell
you that I love you and I believe in you
and I believe in your ability to create a better life. That nest may feel empty
but I am always going to be here to remind you you are not stuck where you
are because you my friend have a beautiful and strong pair of wings.
Alrighty I'll be waiting for you in the next episode.
And I'm not talking about your spouse's farts.
I'm talking about...
Is that good setup, Trace?
Yeah, the setup is great.
Okay, great.
So let me just grab my phone because I got the text right here.
Okay.
Jesus, my...
Dude, what the hell?
I haven't even eaten anything today.
I got some stuff happening here.
Oh, why do I have the pickups?
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician,
professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.
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