Preparing, Adjusting, and Loving the Empty Nest
By Michele Howe
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About this ebook
Preparing, Adjusting, and Loving the Empty Nest covers new and more in-depth topics related to the empty-nest stage of life. The author invites you to sit down and "linger a while in all things empty nest related—then go a step further and reflect upon the life lessons other empty-nest parents have discovered."
Sample chapters include:
- Helping Your High School Kids Ready Themselves to Face the World
- Budgeting Is a Family Affair
- Generating a Strong Bond of Trust That Will Handle the Separation
- Handling Those Lonely Feelings
- Never, Ever Compare Your Journey to Others
- Work at Making Coming Home Special for Your Grown Children
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Preparing, Adjusting, and Loving the Empty Nest - Michele Howe
Preparing, Adjusting, and Loving the Empty Nest:
A Companion to Empty Nest, What’s Next? (eBook edition)
© 2017 Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC
P. O. Box 3473
Peabody, Massachusetts 01961–3473
eBook ISBN 978-1-68307-142-6
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Scripture quotations contained herein are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com. The NIV
and New International Version
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Due to technical issues, this eBook may not contain all of the images or diagrams in the original print edition of the work. In addition, adapting the print edition to the eBook format may require some other layout and feature changes to be made.
First eBook edition — October 2017
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Preparing for the Empty Nest
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Part Two: Adjusting to the Empty Nest
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Part Three: Loving the Empty Nest
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Sources for Quotations
Endorsements
To my sons-in-law,
Jim Zatko
(married to my daughter Nicole)
and
Chase Canning
(married to my daughter Katlyn)
As I watch you both exhibit generous portions of kindness, love,
and respect to our daughters, my mother’s heart is complete.
You are indeed sons-in-law most extraordinaire.
Acknowledgments
Writing is a primarily solo endeavor. Until it isn’t. What most readers don’t realize is that it takes a small army of highly skilled individuals who generously put to use their talents and giftedness to create a product called a book. Certainly, the author spends countless hours in front of a blank computer screen that slowly fills with page after page of written words. But that’s only the first step. The author then sends her work to her publisher, who scrutinizes it from beginning to end (this is good, very good). Once the text is edited, an entire design team steps up and takes over to fashion a winsome cover as well as typesetting and formatting the book in its entirety. Of course, no book would ever reach a reader’s hands without the media savvy of the marketing team. Have I impressed and astounded you yet? I’ve been in the publishing business for over thirty years now, and I’m still amazed by what goes into the making of a book.
My amazement aside, I would like to personally offer my humblest thanks to Patricia Anders, Hendrickson’s editorial director. Thank you for your ongoing enthusiasm and support of my writing ministry. It means the world to me. And to Meg Rusick, Phil Frank, and Tina Donohue, who each played a major role in the development of the book you now hold in your hand. Cue heartfelt clapping on their behalf!
Finally, no book is complete without a reader. For that, I say thank you, dear soul, for picking up my latest book and opening the first page. My hope is that you will find yourself encouraged, challenged, and increasingly set on bringing honor to our loving Lord Jesus Christ no matter what season you find yourself in life’s journey.
Introduction
Welcome back! For all of you who read my first book on the empty-nest season of life, Empty Nest, What’s Next? Parenting Adult Children without Losing Your Mind , and contacted me with requests to cover new and different topics, here we go—more of the same but this time on completely different topics. Once I wrapped up Empty Nest, What’s Next? and began speaking about it, many folks offered numerous different topics I didn’t have room to cover in the first book.
It is therefore with great excitement that I present Preparing, Adjusting, and Loving the Empty Nest, a three-part primer for parents dealing with their children leaving home for the first time. Although this book is structured the same as Empty Nest, What’s Next?, new in this book are questions at the end of each chapter for personal reflection or group discussion.
So, sit yourself down and linger a while in all things empty-nest related. Then go a step further and reflect on the life lessons other empty-nest parents have discovered. It’s all good. Promise!
Part One: Preparing for the Empty Nest
Chapter 1
Preparing Your High Schoolers to Face the World
The name of the LORD is a fortified tower;
the righteous run to it and are safe.
Proverbs 18:10
Our weakness will not get in the way of what the Lord wants to do in us. Our delusions of strength will! The power of God is for the weak! The grace of God is for the unable! The promises of God are for the faint! The wisdom of God is for the foolish!
Paul Tripp
Ifelt totally unprepared, I had trouble sleeping at night, and I cried when alone. Some memories never quite leave you. These intense emotions of feeling undone and afraid bombarded me in the weeks prior to leaving for college some thirty-five years ago. Whoa! Talk about the power of emotion-charged memories. Every parent I know wants their children to avoid the pain they experienced in their younger years. What we all tend to forget is that no amount of parental training can fully insulate those we love from life’s growing pains. Sure, we can focus on getting our children ready to meet the world by teaching them skills and abilities to cope with everyday life. But if we’re wise, we won’t neglect the greatest insurance policy
available on planet earth: a robust personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
Given how utterly terrified I was about leaving home for the first time and going away to college, I’ve thought a lot about what I could have done differently. If I could speak to my then eighteen-year-old self, I would tell that young woman to stop wasting time attempting to figure everything out in advance. I would whisper in her ear that no matter how much energy she expended worrying, it wouldn’t make a whit of difference. Most importantly, I would sit her down and tell her about the faithfulness of our God. I would give her the keys to the kingdom by showing her how to build the solidest of foundations for life. We would open God’s word together and carefully go through those passages that tell of God’s character and of his love for her. I would then hand her a journal, and we would begin jotting down these same Scripture verses for those moments when fear and worry would raise their ugly heads in the days ahead.
Knowing what I know now, I would spend the majority of my time investing in my own relationship with Jesus Christ by getting to know him better and better. Of course, I cannot go back in time to school myself. I can, however, guide my own children through these same paces so that their foundation for life is rock solid. It goes without saying that wise parents will teach their kids to be responsible members of society. Instructing our children as they grow in those age-appropriate tasks and skills is vital in enabling them to care for themselves once they leave home. Still, at the heart of parenting lies a greater task—that of instilling a deep and abiding love for God that will carry our children through every storm they’ll face in the years to come.
What does it mean to help our young adult children get ready to face the world? I do agree that it includes teaching them the day-in-and-day-out responsibilities of being part of a family. In practical terms, this works itself out as parents model life for their children to emulate. Mom and Dad maintain the home, cars, and yard, pay bills, buy food and prepare meals, do the laundry, go to doctor and dental appointments, support extended family and friends, and serve in their local church. In every way imaginable, our children immerse themselves in the how-to of living by living with us.
Readying our high schoolers to leave home for the first time also means engaging in multiple good talks about what they will encounter at college or on the job. It will entail discussions from the heart about making the best choices when presented with countless mediocre ones. From the inside out, we’re prepping our beloved offspring to jump headlong into life’s myriad of choices without us at their side. What better way to send off
our children than by equipping them to view every decision, every choice, and every thought through the lens of Scripture?
Parents and children will feel the strain that letting go and moving forward brings. Change in and of itself is stressful. Still, there can also be an accompanying sense of excitement when both parents along with their children begin to experience the possibilities of this new season. When the whole family is soundly anchored in Jesus Christ, everyone can face the unknown future with hope-filled grace.
Take-away Action Thought
I will purpose to keep the big things the main things as I prepare my child for leaving home. Faith first and always.
My Heart’s Cry to You, O Lord
Lord, you know how I fight private battles with my fears about sending my children off into the world. Day after day, I’ve allowed myself to ponder the problems they may face so far from home. Night after night, I wake up worrying about imaginary challenges that haven’t even happened—that may never happen. Lord, help me to focus on your strong faithfulness despite my own lack of faith. I am weak. I know it. I also understand that your Spirit lives within me and will give me all I need to be the parent you want me to be. Help me, Lord, to keep first things first. Faith in you is primary; everything else is secondary. Give me what I require to lead my family to a saving faith in your Son Jesus and to grow strong as his disciple. Amen.
Questions for Personal Reflection or Group Discussion
What are your biggest fears for your children once they leave home?
How can you handle the worries you might experience if your children begin struggling with challenges out of your control while away?
What is the main biblical truth you want to impart to your children in preparation for sending them off into the world?
In what ways can you find courage and refuge in God’s promises for yourself, which you can also share with your children?
Chapter 2
Delegating Is Part of the Process
Blessed are those whose strength is in you,
whose hearts are set on pilgrimage.
Psalm 84:5
My daily vow is to give my loved ones many pieces of protective armor that will help them carry on, make sound decisions, and guard their heart. This internal armor shall come from daily offerings of presence, wisdom, faith, and unconditional love.
Rachel Macy Stafford
Sometimes I get so focused on how I’ll emotionally handle upcoming events and life changes that I take for granted how comforting it is to prepare well in practical ways. Life isn’t all about how we feel. Nor is it confined solely to how we think. Much of life is in the doing, which helps us feel more equipped to deal with what’s coming. Try it—it’s worked countless times for me.
There are moments when my emotions threaten to spill over into negative talk, and I have to stop myself