

Empty-nest season is almost upon us. This rite of passage in the parental journey kicks into high gear in late summer and is often filled with dread and sadnessβespecially for womenβas their children head off into the world.
Rethinking the βEmpty Nestβ Narrative
Itβs easy to buy into the narrative the patriarchy would have us believe: that once our children are launched, we no longer have a role in society. That weβre used up. That our lives just languish in front of usβour only joy arriving when our kids stumble home with duffel bags full of dirty laundry and empty bellies ready for home cooking. But I think itβs bullshit.
I sometimes wonder if weβve created a self-fulfilling prophecy around the whole empty-nest thing. Am I sad because I think Iβm supposed to be sad? If Iβm not walking around with a box of tissues all day, what does that say about me as a mother? Does it mean I donβt love my kids enough?
(NOTE: I am in no way making light of women who deal with very real symptoms of depression at this time. If this is your experience, please reach out to your doctor or therapist.)
What If We Saw It as Growth Instead of Loss?
What if we didnβt anticipate that this change would be hard? What if we acknowledged it as the next healthy step in the evolution of our familyβand ourselves? Our children are supposed to go off into the world to do their thing. By allowing them the space to change and adapt, we get the chance to do the same.
Too often, our experiences are compressed into either/or scenarios. Youβre either the devoted mother who cries at every reminder of her child, or youβre the emotionless one who turns the bedroom into a home gym the day after they move out.
But what if we allowed ourselves to be both?
Living in the Middle Way
Our lived experiences show weβre far more complicated than a binary choice. There is always the option of the middle wayβallowing yourself to be in the liminal space of not knowing.
An empty nest is absolutely about loss and shifting into a new identity. But what if you acknowledged that griefβand instead of letting it swallow youβused it as fuel to grow into a new version of yourself? Could you move forward into that new identity with both joy and curiosity?
A Single Motherβs Perspective
As a single mother, I find the freedom of stepping into an empty nest a little intoxicating. There are things I want to do with my life that I canβt when my world is so heavily intertwined with my children. Iβm not abandoning themβtheyβre off having new experiences in new places. Why should I be stuck in the same old life, just waiting for Thanksgiving break?
I never had this kind of agency in my 20s. Back then, I didnβt really know who I was or what I wanted. I compromised on dreams before I even had them figured outβbusy paying down student debt and following boyfriends around the country. My 20s were centered on ticking off a checklist: get married by a certain age, have children by a certain age.
Now? Iβve been there and done that. Whatβs next?
More Than Distraction
This is the point in most articles where Iβm supposed to say: go get a hobby, join a club, take up pickleball. But those can just be new ways to distract yourself so you donβt have to feel.
What if I suggested something different?
Itβs not about distractionβitβs about becoming so deeply aware of yourself it almost hurts.
I want you to hold grief and joy at the same time, which means being present in every moment.
I want you to get comfortable with being uncomfortable.
I want you to ask yourself what feels true right nowβand not be so numb with distractions that you canβt answer.
Some days, nothing will feel true. Your body, career, and relationships may all be in flux. But that flux gives you the space to figure out who you really are. Itβs a chance to rewrite your story so itβs aligned with the person you are now. We get to shed the weight of people, places, and things that are no longer ours to carry.
Stepping Into Whatβs Next
None of this will feel easy. It wonβt happen overnight. You wonβt wake up the morning after your child leaves with your new identity in place. It will be raw and messy. But you have a choice: step into the mess with heaviness and dreadβor with possibility and excitement.
The Empty Nest and Coping Mechanisms
In my work with women exploring their relationship with alcohol, the empty nest often plays a role in increased nightly drinking. Distractions start out innocent enough: happy hours, high-intensity workouts, endless scrolling, or extra-long workdays.
The danger comes when those distractions become addictionsβwhen they turn into coping strategies. You can slide into a place of darkness without even realizing itβs happening.
Removing distractionsβor at least becoming aware of themβallows you to reconnect with parts of yourself you may not have touched in years.
If youβre curious about exploring your relationship with alcohol, please reach out and book a STRONGER SOBER session here. βKrysty


