Kids & Family
Permission to Grieve When Your Children Go Away to College
When our children leave the nest, it is okay to grieve!

(Editorβs note: With parents gearing up to send their kids off to college for the upcoming school year, we wanted to share this piece, one of Patchβs most popular user posts. It was originally published in August 2014.)
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I remember four years ago August very clearly. The focus was on my oldest daughter Carly going off to college. She was only going an hour away to Monmouth University, but I still felt sad that she wouldnβt be living at home anymore. Donβt get me wrong; I also felt happy, proud and excited as well, but the grief was the emotion that I was feeling the strongest. I realized during that summer and fall the importance of listening to others when they share their sadness over changes in their lives.
I truly needed someone to listen to me but had trouble finding people who would truly just listen. Instead, when I did share about my feelings of grief, most people were not at all supportive and even looked at me strangely and said with a judgmental tone, βArenβt you happy for her?β, βIsnβt her going to college a good thing?β, βI couldnβt wait til mine left.β I walked away from most of these interactions feeling unheard, frustrated, and feeling that that there was something wrong with me. After all there are commercials on TV showing parents pretending to be sad when the kids leave home and then jumping for joy and throwing parties. So what was wrong with me? Why couldnβt I only feel happy and thrilled at this wonderful opportunity for Carly? I guess I wasnβt supposed to be sad or at the very least I wasnβt supposed to talk about it.
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So I stopped telling others how I felt. I also vowed to become a better comforter of others when they shared with me any sadness or pain in their lives. I also wanted to teach others how to really listen to their friends, loved ones and co-workers when they shared anything emotional. I would remind them not to try to fix it or to be so quick to offer advice. Just listen and try to understand. It isnβt hard to really listen, but it is a skill that we would all benefit from practicing. I wish that listening was taught in school. Our relationships would improve immensely.
Grief is not only due to a death or divorce, but grief can come from any type of separation, ending or change in our lives. I found myself comparing my loss to otherβs losses. As a grief counselor, I warn folks not to do this. I shamed myself when I thought of all of those I know who have lost a child through death and knew that this loss could not even come close. Minimizing my loss though didnβt help. My grief felt like an ending. It was the beginning of the end of my experience of being the kind of mom as I had been for the past 17 years. It was the beginning of my children becoming independent and not needing me in the same way as they had before. I know that is what is supposed to happen and all about giving our children roots and wings, but knowing that didnβt make if feel any better.
I loved having all of my kids home and around. I donβt think that will ever change. I am one who wishes there could be a law that if family gets along then our siblings have to return to live in the same town so that cousins can live near each other. I know quite a few families in Springfield whose children are all in this town and the cousins even go to school together and grandparents are able to be very involved in thier day to day lives. It is wonderful to see. I can appreciate that as my younger brother lives in Illinois and we only see his family once a year. I wish that young adult children could get jobs that were close by their family and at the very least live in the same state. However I know that with todayβs economy that doesnβt always happen.
One woman told me βToday you are lucky if your kids live in the same country as you since quite a few of them get jobs in far away places.β
Her son works in China. I immediately thought of my first cousin who lives in Amsterdam with his family. We miss him so much.
Then I started to wonder about other parents. Werenβt they sad as well? How can we live with our children for 17, 18 or 19 years and then drop them off at college without us experiencing any feelings of grief? I came up with many ideas: Maybe some didnβt really like being with their kids. Maybe some were denying their true feelings of sadness or just pretended they were βfineβ. Maybe some were truly anxious to get back to their own lives that didnβt involve their children as much. Whatever it was, I wanted to find the other parents who felt like me. I was on a mission. I even ran a workshop in town four years ago called: Theyβre Excited About Going Away to College, But What About Us? About ten moms attended the workshop and it was great to share with each other.
Over the past four years I have spoken with many moms and dads who have shared their own grief with me about their children leaving home. Often with couples, it is one parent who expresses sadness more than the other. Some confide to me that it is their own spouse who βshamed themβ about their feelings of grief, especially if the dad was grieving.
I recently had the pleasure of meeting a Navy Seal dad at a Long Island AAU basketball tournament, who shared with me that of all the experiences he has had in his life, including that of a Seal, nothing was as hard as dropping his oldest daughter off to college last year and saying goodbye. He told me how he cried the whole drive back. He has five children and is already grieving about his second child who is a high school senior who will be going away next year. I felt such a sense of validation from this kind fatherβs honest sharing. It helped me to feel better about my own feelings. Sometimes just talking to others who feel similarly to the way we feel can help enormously. We donβt feel so alone and we feel a bit more βnormalβ.
Anyway, if you are a parent who has a child going away to college and you feel sad, find people who will listen to you and show comfort. Allow yourself to feel the grief. Donβt talk yourself out of how you feel. Find support on Facebook as many parents I see lately doing. βPack lots of tissuesβ one mom said in a post to another who shared that they were on their way to college.
It really does get easier, although I will confess that each year she packed up and left I cried. One time Carly said, βMom, I am a senior at college. We have been through this many times. Why do you still cry when I leave?β βI donβt knowβ, I sniffled, βI just miss you.β I guess itβs love or neurosis, but that is who I am. I know I will cry when my younger ones leave the nest as well, but at least they all know how I get, so it wonβt be a surprise to them. Who knows maybe it makes them realize just how much they are loved. I hope so.
βListening is a high art of loving. Ask yourself,β When is the last time I really listened to my child? My parent? My brother or sister? When someone is ready to share, three magic words amplify your connection, and they are, βTell me more.β ~ Rev. Mary Manin Morrissey
Take care of yourself,
Lisa
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