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Two moms navigating empty nest life with heart, humour, and a whole lot of family love.

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I’m Not Ready | Sharing A Mom’s Heart Before College

I’m not ready.

I’m not ready.

That is the refrain that is running through my brain in an endless loop.

I'm Not Ready | www.simply2moms.com | One mom explores the emotions of saying goodbye as her oldest leaves for college. #grownandflown #emptynest #college #sayinggoodbye

Photo by J. Sadoff

The year is 1999.

It’s August, and I am preparing a nursery for my unborn child, who will arrive in November.

I don’t know whether this little person who loves to turn somersaults in my belly will be a boy or a girl.

I don’t really know what to expect, despite religiously devouring my What to Expect The First Year book.

What I do know is that I love this tiny being fiercely, even though we’ve not officially met.

And I’m not ready for motherhood quite yet.

I spent the last month of that summer 19 years ago creating a haven for my baby.

My nesting instinct was strong!

We decided to paint the walls pale aqua and decorate the room with tropical fish.

Those bright colors would be cheerful and stimulating, and it was gender-neutral. We wanted that surprise in the delivery room!

We bought a beautiful crib and special wedges to keep him safe inside it.

We shopped for a wipe warmer, a diaper genie, and a cushy changing pad with a buckle.

Tiny clothes and special detergent to clean them found their way into my shopping cart at Target.

We thought that having the stuff to care for him would magically help us to do the job better.

When my water broke the evening after my due date, I was so excited to finally meet our newborn!

I may not have known exactly what to expect, but I was ready.

Or at least as ready as I could be to jump into the unknowns of parenting. Our son arrived the next morning amidst tears of joy.

Two short days later the hospital sent us home.

My husband and I looked at each other warily as we buckled in with our seat belts for the ride home: the magnitude of the responsibility of parenthood was just beginning to sink in.

Fast forward 18 and a half years.

As the years fly by you’ll see a blur of laughter, tears, tantrums, a friendship, the arrival of twin sisters.

You’ll see a painfully shy little boy.

Then, a move to a new state, Legos, new friendships, baseball, and school.

Family vacations, family visits, more friendships, forts, and always more Legos.

On to middle school, where he develops an amazing sense of humor, a few broken bones, fewer Legos, more baseball, and a growth in confidence.

Next there’s high school, girl friends, driving, family dinners, travel baseball, high school baseball.

A close group of friends, a heartbreak, some bad decisions, some dark days followed by some amazing ones.

Next came college acceptances, a big decision, and graduation with the highest honors.

And throughout it all, so much love.

The year is now 2018.

It’s August, and I am preparing for a new home for this young man.

The nesting instinct has returned in full force.

I feel a desperate need to ensure that his bed will be comfortable.

The colors of choice are now the red and black of his university.

I fill the aching void that is already forming inside me with shopping trips with him for a new suit.

For organizers, cleaning supplies, an iron, an umbrella, and luggage.

The trappings of the life of an adult.

I try to pretend that I can somehow be ready to send my son to college by making sure he has what he needs.

I feel tears fill my eyes daily, and a lump often rises in my throat that makes breathing hard.

Occasionally, I wake from a dream of him as a boy with tears running down my cheeks at night.

Every hug feels too short.

When he sits beside me during the evening to have his back scratched, he stands up again too soon.

I worry that I’ve forgotten to teach him something vitally important.

I try to make all his favorite meals in anticipation of his leaving.

Buy a meaningful gift to remind him that this home where he grew up will always be open to him.

I write him a letter reminding him how much he is loved, how proud I am of him, and how excited I am for him. I am careful to keep my tone upbeat and my tears from falling onto the page.

I'm Not Ready | www.simply2moms.com | One mom explores the emotions of saying goodbye as her oldest leaves for college. #grownandflown #emptynest #college #sayinggoodbye #wandererbracelets

I’m still not ready.

However, when I look at the strong, confident, loving, funny young man who bounds through our door when he returns from work, or a trip of a lifetime driving up the east coast with his two best friends, who sits beside me at dinners, I can see something important.

He is ready.

I'm Not Ready | www.simply2moms.com | One mom explores the emotions of saying goodbye as her oldest leaves for college. #grownandflown #emptynest #college #sayinggoodbye
Photo by C. Zucker

We didn’t really know what we were doing during those years of raising that baby to become a man.

He was our guinea pig for parenting!

Sometimes we were probably too strict.

A few times we were likely too lenient.

We made some mistakes, but we also got a lot right.

There were numerous prayers to get through some of the days and a few of those nights.

We all shed some tears along the way.

And while he was a challenging baby, toddler, pre-schooler and young boy, he became a confident and funny tween and teen.

We aren’t really sure what to expect as we let go and send him out into the world.

But.

He is secure in knowing that we are always here for him, unwavering.

It reminds me of how God is our unwavering strength: always there for us in the joys and in the struggles.

A friend of mine recently shared an article with me about trusting God in the next phase of your child’s life that really resonated with me. (Ironically, AnnMarie sent me the same article about an hour later. I think God wanted to make sure I really got this message!)

It reminded me that Jesus likely felt the same emotions that I am and that my job as a parent is to ultimately let him go, even though it hurts.

My son has always belonged first to God, and it is time to “put his basket in the water.”

I may not be ready to say goodbye to this chapter in his life, but it is time for his next chapter to begin.

  1. Heather Joiner says:

    Oh my, this brought tears to my eyes! I stumbled across your page as I was looking for ideas to help my daughter with her dorm room this fall, all the while thinking, “I’m not ready!”

    I had no idea where to start or what to expect. While my daughter is only moving an hour a way, I know that things will be different, it is time for her to spread her wings and to move into adulthood.

    Thank you for sharing this!

    • Anne says:

      Aww, Heather, sending you a big virtual hug! You’re right, even if they’re just an hour away, the whole relationship and dynamic changes. If it makes you feel any better, I’ve discovered that the relationship that’s developed with my adult children (my son who I wrote that post about has now graduated college and is living on his own!), is pretty amazing. In fact, I think I prefer this more laidback friendship that I have with them now! There were definitely some bumps along the road while he and his sisters have been in college, but sit back and enjoy this next stage!

  2. Susan Monsey says:

    Tears! Best of luck to you both!!!!

    • Kim says:

      This couldn’t have come at a better time for me to read. Although you went thru it a year ago, I’m going thru it now. My baby, my only boy of three children, is graduating in a few days and leaving in August for college. He’ll only be 3 hours away but it might as well be across the country. I think why this is so hard for me is because I did not expect to feel this way. I never thought I would be the Mom crying at the mere mention of her last child going off to school. I guess it is the end of an era that I’m not really ready to say good bye to. He’s ready for sure, which is good. I’ve still got a couple of months to let this all sink in and to still enjoy having him home. Thanks for sharing your experience, it helps me to know I’m not alone.

      • Anne says:

        Aww, Kim, I’m sending you hugs across the miles! What is it about sending our boys to college? I definitely didn’t foresee myself being that weepy mom either. One of my good friends sent her twins to college last year too and she and her husband became empty nesters as a result. She said the first few months were hard as they figured out how to just be a couple again for day-to-day life. However, by the second semester she was excited to send them back to school because they (she and her husband) had “gotten their groove back” and were really enjoying each other again! Hang in there. Keep in touch and let me know how you are? -Anne

  3. Steph says:

    I may be feeling more sentimental about Ryan’s transition than Samantha’s. I remember pockets, packs, and a magical bond between mothers because we knew we were not alone. Love you, darlin, and really miss you right now.

  4. Linda Kraus says:

    This story helped me today. I moved my baby in his dorm yesterday at FAU.

  5. Carolyn Patrinicola says:

    The lumps in your throat, tears in your eyes, and hiccup in your heart passed to me as I read your gripping story, with great pride and longing to hold you tight, as your mom who knows you have given the essence of your love into raising Ryan. Never do you have to doubt this truth! God knows you have boundless live in you, Anne, and becoming a wife and mother brought it forth in its fullness! God has birthed in you all that He has known that you needed! Now it is up to you to let Him be your rod and staff, so He can become Ryan’s all in all! Praise God you have found your Savior and my daily prayers gif you, Kevin, Ryan and the girls will water your river of prayers!

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