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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Dealing with the sense of loss when my son left for his university

96 replies

suzy2015 · 08/09/2015 08:28

Hi,
I am new to Mumsnet and have joined to ask other mums about dealing with the immense sense of loss I feel, after dropping off my son at his Halls in University on Saturday.
Though I am proud of the fact that he got into his chosen career(Medicine), I am finding it very difficult to cope, since I returned to our empty home on Sunday.
I work full-time and thought that I would cope better but alas, not.
My tears don't stop and my heart feels so empty. The silence in the house is deafening. The lack of the hustle bustle in the morning is driving me crazy. Everything is reminding me of him but I don't want to keep calling him or letting him see my pain. Want him to be happy and make new friends. But I feel like crying all the the time, don't feel like talking to friends or watch TV.
Am I abnormal or over-reacting?
Does any one feels the same?

OP posts:
brainwashed · 08/09/2015 09:59

Oh this will be me next Saturday. I know I am being daft, particularly as DS will only be about 45 minutes away Blush and I have a younger DS.
I am doing a muddy obstacle race the day after....that should distract me for a bit ( except that its the kind of thing we've previously done together)

TenQuidProQuo · 08/09/2015 09:59

Three of my DC are at Uni and I've not had a problem leaving them but my last DC is starting in a couple of weeks and I'm not sure how I'll feel. I think it will be different when no one is left at home. I don't think I'll cry but I'll definitely miss her. Mostly though I think I will just feel happy and excited for her.

I love the UK university system. I've lived in countries where the DC tend to study locally and end up living at home. I much prefer the way that most UK DC live away. It's a gentle stepping stone to grown up life.

I think it's ok to feel sad as long as you don't make your son feel upset or guilty about leaving.

My DC were all delighted and excited about going to Uni and I would hate to take the shine off it for them. I can remember my Mum being 'gushy' and I remember finding it a bit much. Confused

It's great when they come back for holidays, I love watching them mature and get more independent.

If they are doing medicine then they get quite short holidays but at least they end up with lots of interesting stories to tell you.

angemorange · 08/09/2015 10:00

I am an only child who left for Uni over 20 years ago and the impact on my parents was terrible - but over time they adjusted and looked forward to holidays and visits. I think I surprised them a few times by turning up on the doorstep when I felt a bit homesick. I 'boomeranged' back and forward in my 20's and probably totally drove them mad as they had got used to their independence by then!
Now I have a DS of my own and my mother lives 10 minutes away so they have a great relationship. I dread the day he goes off to Uni or to live independently but it's not the end. If he's anything like me he'll not be too far away!
Good luck Suzy, remember it's only a very short time before he's back again :)

GoblinLittleOwl · 08/09/2015 10:20

Felt the same when I got back to my empty house, but a large bag of jellybabies, a good book and some hard work dealt with it.

mellowheart · 08/09/2015 10:28

I can still remember my DM sat on my brothers bed crying after he'd left home and got married. She was inconsolable. It's perfectly natural to feel this way OP, but I promise you, it will get better. You've just moved to another phase in life but there'll be plenty of good times ahead for you all.

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 08/09/2015 10:35

I sobbed my socks off, a fortnight ago, when ds1 left home to start his first job - he graduated in the summer and has a place on a commercial graduate scheme - it's his dream job, and I am so proud of him. But we live near Glasgow, and the office where he will be working is in Kent - so he has moved into a shared house. When he was at University, I knew that this was still 'home' for him - he was registered to vote here, and was home for all the university vacations - but that isn't the case any more, and it felt like he'd taken a very big step away from me.

Ds3 headed off to start university last weekend - he's gone all the way to Aberdeen - and ds2's term starts next weekend - and as dh works away 3-4 days a week, and spends 1-2 nights a week in London, I am going to be all on my own too - so I do understand how you are feeling, suzy - and I have to be honest, I am dreading that point where the house falls silent and I am all on my own - though it is not as bad for me because, with three of them, the empty nest has come upon me fairly gradually - not all at once like you.

I am hoping that time will make it better - I know they do have to leave home (even though I am tempted to forbid it) - and we should be proud of the fact that we have raised bright, independent young adults who can cope out there in the Big Wide World. I have a couple of hobbies - though they don't fill my time, but I don't work - so I am considering taking an OU degree.

It's not easy - and I wish I could give you a big, unmumsnetty hug. Remember - there are people here to talk to, and we do understand how you are feeling.

Bakeoffcake · 08/09/2015 10:43

I was exactly the same, as was dh, with both DDs but it was even harder with DD2 as we also returned to an empty house. I was a wreck for about a month, then very slowly it did get better as you get used to the new routines. It's very early days for you.

I'm suffering again at the moment as Dd2 has gone to a university in America for a year- she is so far away and I feel like I did when she first went- all over again! I know I'll get used to it and as everyone will tell you, the time goes so quickly. When she gets back to her UK university next year (which is only 3 hours away) it will be lovely.

TheHouseOnTheLane · 08/09/2015 11:22

My Mum who is tough....said "It was like a death" when I asked her (years later) how she felt when I left....I was the last of 4 children so it was a bit of a shock to them. My Dad and Mum DID adjust though OP....then they had a marvelous time! They really did. He'll be home soon....starving and needing looking after...and that goes on for a LONG time.

TheHouseOnTheLane · 08/09/2015 11:23

Also, could you get a pet?

ImperialBlether · 08/09/2015 12:22

I was the same but I was a single parent and (without pulling rank here!) it's much, much harder. You can talk about him to your husband, you can do things together, you can plan trips to visit him together. If you're on your own it's completely different - a single parent is literally on her own when her child/last child leaves home.

It is very difficult and you do get used to it. Take your time, set up a routine for talking to him, send him little care packages and try not to get on his nerves! Plan to go and take him out in a couple of weeks - you'll be surprised how much better you feel by then.

Abraid2 · 08/09/2015 12:32

My son goes off in a fortnight's time, too, OP, and I know I'll find it really weird and miss him, though he has eased us into it by working lots of shifts over the holidays so he hasn't been around when we have a lot of the time.

I am lucky to still have another one at home for the moment but I am really aware that I am just borrowing them for another few years.

But the student offspring will be back with their bags of washing before we know it.

Chin up. You'll be fine. Plan a visit when he's settled in. I'm sure he'd appreciate a Sunday lunch out somewhere nice. I always did at university!

TheExMotherInLaw · 08/09/2015 12:51

I have nothing constructive to add, but my understanding and support. It does ease, slowly. I found I missed the first one to leave, but not the second! I still miss that fisrt one, 10 years later. Last time he left after popping in for a rare visit I startled DH by bursting into tears!
However, it is good that you both miss him, as it means DH understands.
Plan a getaway together somewhere, just the two of you, maybe plan redecorating the house.
As others have said, he will soon be back with more laundry than you thought possible, and eat you out of house and home.
I think it is worth saying to ds that you're proud of him starting to make his own way in the world, but that you do miss him, especially (insert whatever thing he used to do that drove you up the wall), so he will laugh.

EnthusiasmDisturbed · 08/09/2015 13:00

I think it is totally understandable whatever your situation single with one child married with three still at home it's another step in your child's life and the first step they taking without you

He is growing up and to some degree growing away to become his own person as much as we want this for them we are having to let go
of the child we have raised

Don't be hard on yourself Smile

SheGotAllDaMoves · 08/09/2015 13:01

My two will probably both go at the same time in two years so the house will go from a place of noise and fun and dirty mugs to a house of quiet and order.

I think I'll be okay, but predict DH will struggle. He already talks about it and says we have to do this or that 'before the kids leave'.

I think I will book us both a trip, leaving on the first day of freshers week.

claraschu · 08/09/2015 13:04

Here is an article on this subject, by Bill Bryson, which always makes me cry. Maybe that's not what any of us needs, but I like his writing and find it somehow cathartic:

On Losing a Son (to College)
from Bill Bryson’s book I’m a Stranger Here Myself, 1999

This may get a little sentimental, and I’m sorry, but yesterday evening I was working at my desk when my youngest child came up to me, a baseball bat perched on his shoulder and a cap on his head, and asked me if I felt like playing a little ball with him. I was trying to get some important work done before going away on a long trip, and I very nearly declined with regrets, but then it occurred to me that never again would he be seven years, one month, and six days old, so we had better catch these moments while we can.

So we went out onto the front lawn and here is where it gets sentimental. There was a kind of beauty about the experience so elemental and wonderful I cannot tell you – the way the evening sun fell across the lawn, the earnest eagerness of his young stance, the fact that we were doing this most quintessentially dad-and-son thing, the supreme contentment of just being together – and I couldn’t believe that it would ever have occurred to me that finishing an article or writing a book or doing anything at all could be more important and rewarding than this.

Now what has brought on all this sudden sensitivity is that a week or so ago we took our eldest son off to a small university in Ohio. He was the first of our four to fly the coop, and now he is gone – grown up, independent, far away – and I am suddenly realizing how quickly they go.
“Once they leave for college they never really come back,” a neighbor who has lost two of her own in this way told us wistfully the other day.

This isn’t what I wanted to hear. I wanted to hear that they come back a lot, only this time they hang up their clothes, admire you for your intelligence and wit, and no longer have a hankering to sink diamond studs into various odd holes in their heads. But the neighbor was right. He is gone. There is an emptiness in the house that proves it.

I hadn’t expected it to be like this because for the past couple of years even when he was here he wasn’t really here, if you see what I mean. Like most teenagers, he didn’t live in our house in any meaningful sense – more just dropped by a couple of times a day to see what was in the refrigerator or to wander between rooms, a towel round his waist, calling out “Mom, where’s my . . .?” as in “Mom, where’s my yellow shirt?” and “Mom, where’s my deodorant?”

Occasionally I would see the top of his head in an easy chair in front of a television on which Asian people were kicking each other in the heads, but mostly he resided in a place called “Out.”
My role in getting him off to college was simply to write checks – lots and lots of them – and to look suitably pale and aghast as the sums mounted. I was staggered at the cost of sending a child to college these days. Perhaps it is because we live in a community where these matters are treated earnestly, but nearly every college-bound youth in our town goes off and looks at half a dozen or more prospective universities at enormous cost. Then there are fees for college entrance examinations and a separate fee for each university applied to.

But all this pales beside the cost of college itself. My son’s tuition is $19,000 a year, which I am told is actually quite reasonable these days. Some schools charge as much as $28,000 for tuition. Then there is a fee of $3,000 a year for his room, $2,400 for food, $700 or so for books, $650 for health center fees and insurance, and $710 for “activities.” Don’t ask me what that is. I just sign the checks.

Still to come are the costs of flying him to and from Ohio at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter, plus all the other incidental expenses like spending money and long-distance phone bills. Already my wife is calling him every other day to ask if he has enough money, when in fact, as I point out, it should be the other way around. And here’s one more thing. Next year, I have a daughter who goes off to college, so I get to do this twice.

So you will excuse me, I hope, when I tell you that the emotional side of this event was rather overshadowed by the ongoing financial shock. It wasn’t until we dropped him at his university dormitory and left him there looking touchingly lost and bewildered amid an assortment of cardboard boxes and suitcases in a spartan room not unlike a prison cell that it really hit home that he was vanishing out of our lives and into his own.

Now that we are home it is even worse. There is no kick-boxing on the TV, no astounding clutter of sneakers in the back hallway, no calls of “Mom, where’s my . . .?” from the top of the stairs, no one my size to call me a “doofus” or to say, “Nice shirt, Dad. Did you mug a boat person?” In fact, I see now, I had it exactly wrong. Even when he wasn’t here, he was here, if you see what I mean. And now he is not here at all.

It takes only the simplest things – a wadded-up sweatshirt found behind the backseat of the car, some used chewing gum left in a patently inappropriate place – to make me want to blubber helplessly. Mrs. Bryson, meanwhile, doesn’t need any kind of prod. She just blubbers helplessly.

For the past week I have found myself spending a lot of time wandering aimlessly through the house looking at the oddest things – a basketball, his running trophies, an old holiday snapshot – and thinking about all the carelessly discarded yesterdays they represent. The hard and unexpected part is the realization not just that my son is not here but that the boy he was is gone forever. I would give anything to have them both back. But of course that cannot be. Life moves on. Kids grow up and move away, and if you don’t know this already, believe me, it happens faster than you can imagine.

Which is why, if you will excuse me, I am going to finish here and go off and play a little baseball on the front lawn while the chance is still there.

Shodan · 08/09/2015 13:37

I remember re-reading that book after ds1 went away, claraschu , and sobbing my heart out when I got to that bit.

And even now, when I'm awaiting a call back from him, during which he will almost certainly tell me (yet again Grin) that he needs clothes/books/something else that requires me to get out the credit card (again), I still get a lump in my throat.

Strange though it is, you do get used to the 'new normal'. I have one still at home, much younger, and he, DH and I have adjusted to our little three-unit. We're even planning next year's summer holiday to suit just us three (ds1 has very different interests and anyway, we're assuming he'll want to holiday with his very lovely girlfriend).

And when he comes home, for holidays/weekends, I still grumble about the amount of towels he uses, and DH grumbles about the numerous cups left in his room, and we quietly think 'It's so much calmer when ds1 isn't here, and the towels stay where we leave them...' Grin. As lovely as it is to see him, there are good things to celebrate about our 'new' life.

suzy2015 · 08/09/2015 13:52

Thank you everyone, it is so re-assuring to know that I am not abnormal or it is not unusual to feel such a deep sense of loss.
Thanks claraschu, for the beautiful article. It says it all.
My brain knows that I have fulfilled my duty as a mother and I should celebrate my son's success probably, my heart just won't listen to reason at the moment.
I thought of myself as strong, practical and logical, how wrong was I, I know it now!!!

OP posts:
brainwashed · 08/09/2015 14:00

claraschu......that really didn't help

Canyouforgiveher · 08/09/2015 14:02

here is anothe article printed by my local paper at this time of year every year. sums it up for me.

I wasn't wrong about their leaving. My husband kept telling me I was. That it wasn't the end of the world when first one child, then another , and then the last packed their bags and left for college.

But it was the end of something. Can you pick me up, Mom?" What's for dinner?" ``What do you think?"

I was the sun and they were the planets. And there was life on those planets, whirling, non stop plans and parties and friends coming and going, and ideas and dreams and the phone ringing and doors slamming.

And I got to beam down on them. To watch. To glow.

And then they were gone, one after the other.

``They'll be back," my husband said. And he was right. They came back. But he was wrong, too, because they came back for intervals -- not for always, not planets anymore, making their predictable orbits, but unpredictable, like shooting stars.

Always is what you miss. Always knowing where they are. At school. At play practice. At a ballgame. At a friend's. Always looking at the clock mid day and anticipating the door opening, the sigh, the smile, the laugh, the shrug. How was school?" answered for years in too much detail. And then he said . . . and then I said to him. . . ." Then hardly answered at all.

Always, knowing his friends.

Her favorite show.

What he had for breakfast.

What she wore to school.

What he thinks.

How she feels.

My friend Beth's twin girls left for Roger Williams yesterday. They are her fourth and fifth children. She's been down this road three times before. You'd think it would get easier.

``I don't know what I'm going to do without them," she has said every day for months.

And I have said nothing, because, really, what is there to say?

A chapter ends. Another chapter begins. One door closes and another door opens. The best thing a parent can give their child is wings. I read all these things when my children left home and thought then what I think now: What do these words mean?

Eighteen years isn't a chapter in anyone's life. It's a whole book, and that book is ending and what comes next is connected to, but different from, everything that has gone before.

Before was an infant, a toddler, a child, a teenager. Before was feeding and changing and teaching and comforting and guiding and disciplining, everything hands -on. Now?

Now the kids are young adults and on their own and the parents are on the periphery, and it's not just a chapter change. It's a sea change.

As for a door closing? Would that you could close a door and forget for even a minute your children and your love for them and your fear for them, too. And would that they occupied just a single room in your head. But they're in every room in your head and in your heart.

As for the wings analogy? It's sweet. But children are not birds. Parents don't let them go and build another nest and have all new offspring next year.

Saying goodbye to your children and their childhood is much harder than all the pithy sayings make it seem. Because that's what going to college is. It's goodbye.

It's not a death. And it's not a tragedy.

But it's not nothing, either.

To grow a child, a body changes. It needs more sleep. It rejects food it used to like. It expands and it adapts.

To let go of a child, a body changes, too. It sighs and it cries and it feels weightless and heavy at the same time.

The drive home alone without them is the worst. And the first few days. But then it gets better. The kids call, come home, bring their friends, fill the house with their energy again.

Life does go on.

Can you give me a ride to the mall?" Mom, make him stop!" I don't miss this part of parenting, playing chauffeur and referee. But I miss them, still, all these years later, the children they were, at the dinner table, beside me on the couch, talking on the phone, sleeping in their rooms, safe, home, mine.

Beverly Beckham can be reached at [email protected].

JugglingFromHereToThere · 08/09/2015 14:21

That's beautiful writing by Bill Bryson -
But then I always love his stuff

It is all all the more poignant for me because we did really lose my DNephew in tragic circumstances last year. He was in his early twenties. My poor DSister Sad

If they're still here be glad of that
They will come home sometimes. You can go visit them when they've settled in

I do utterly sympathise that it is feeling such a loss
I'm sure I will miss DD dreadfully when she leaves for Uni at end of sixth form
It's just obviously it gives me a different perspective

As I said upthread my advice would be to let your head remind your heart that they are still here - by maybe getting in touch slightly more, and perhaps planning a visit to look forward to.

Ragwort · 08/09/2015 14:27

I'm with you redshoe - I can't wait to have the house to myself and quality time with DH - but clearly we are in the minority on this thead Grin. I don't think my parents batted an eyelid either when I left for university, they certainly didn't take me there like so many parents do these days I was on the train with a rucksack and met a very nice student on the journey that led to a whole new adventure Wink.

teatowel · 08/09/2015 14:52

I cried a lot when all three of mine left for uni- but it does get better. I sometimes feel sad now for the childhoods that slipped away when I was too busy to notice them going. Like your son will do in five years time, mine has just qualified as a doctor. You will be so proud of him, even more so than you are at the moment! The leaving is hard to cope with at first but you will cope, you really will.

TinklyLittleLaugh · 08/09/2015 15:12

I cried the night before DS left. I told DH, "I want it to be 18 years ago, I want it to be the night we brought him home from hospital. To have all that time again."

But it's crazy; they are having the life we wanted for them. We should be happy not sad.

And like poor Juggling up thread, by best friend lost her boy in his teens. He is never going to stroll back in with a hangover and a term's load of washing. That helps me keep my sense of loss in proportion.

JugglingFromHereToThere · 08/09/2015 15:23

Thanks Tinkly. Sorry to hijack thread slightly (is a bad habit of mine anyway)
but think it does give an important different perspective as you say.
We are all still devastated by the loss of my DNephew one year on now Sad

Topseyt · 08/09/2015 15:27

Suzy, you are totally normal. I know exactly how you feel.

It is an odd feeling, isn't it. I was delighted and excited for my DD1, who is now 20, when she gained her much coveted place at Warwick a couple of years ago. I was still devastated after she had gone though. I held it together whilst we dropped her off and said goodbye, but in the car on the way home I dissolved, and sobbed all the way while DH drove.

I found the first few weeks very hard indeed, but then it did start to get easier. Slowly and imperceptibly at first, but it did. I have two younger daughters still at home, so that helped.

I am more practised at the goodbyes now. Not usually as emotional. That said though, she is shortly to start her third year, which she is spending in Paris. I am now feeling similar again because this is an even bigger step. I know she will love it and be fine, but this time there will be that stretch of water between us, which can only be crossed by Eurostar, ferry or by flight. Psychological really, and I shall insist to DH that we take the occasional long weekend in a hotel over there to visit.

I don't know where I would have been without the Empty Nest support threads on here at the time, or without DD2 and DD3 to keep me going. My DH is one who takes these things in his stride much more than I do.

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