This weekend, our youngest packed his suitcase, loaded his car, and left for NASA Langley Research Center where he has a STEM-related summer internship — something related to stepper motors, I believe (whatever they are).
This move is something we’ve encouraged — strongly. In fact, we’ve told him he’d need to go to a “dorm college” this next year (as opposed to the living-at-home community college situation of the last couple years). So after he’s done with his internship, he’s off to Virginia Tech to study Sustainable Systems Science (whatever that is).
We are delighted by these changes, and relieved, too, because there’s always an internal exhale when a child makes connections.
But now that they’ve happened, or are happening, twinges of sadness come creeping in.
This is it, y’all. We brought four humans into the world and now they’ve moved out into it. The home we’ve spent the last twenty years creating now houses just us. (And Eucefe, but he leaves in a few weeks.)
We are — [drumroll] — empty nesters.
I thought I was going to love this “It’s Just Us” stage (and I’m pretty sure I will), but right now? I’m mildly bereft.
***
My wobbly feelings are mostly concentrate on one thing: his bedroom.
See, the children’s rooms have always been a manifestation of their ever-more-pronounced personalities with the accompanying developing interests, vacillating temperaments, and strong opinions. As each of them grew, my already-minimal involvement in their rooms diminished, though my irritation at all the “wrong” ways the rooms were being managed never wavered.
It was their space in my house, and I could not wait to reclaim it.
So for weeks now, I have been actively making plan for my younger son’s newly-emptied bedroom, a room which has driven me batty with its sprawling chaos.
But then he moved out and suddenly there was no one to rail against about the mess. His room, still cluttered with the detritus from packing, now felt like a shell. The soul had left it, and — poof — so had my excitement about fixing it up.
Why was I no longer excited? The minute I mentally formulated that question, the tears, and the answer, came:
When I clean out this last child’s room and paint it over, I will have “erased” him from this home.
Which is melodramatic and absolutely not true. It’s not like he’s died, for crying out loud.
- His stuff is still here (but I’m gonna box it up).
- He will be coming home frequently for at least the next couple years.
- Home is the place where when you go there they have to take you in — and for all our children, we will, forever and always.
But this is no longer his primary place. He’s moving on.
***
I was feeling lightly chagrined about my sadness, but then yesterday a friend told me her mother always said the intense loss she felt when her children were leaving home was almost like the grief that comes from a death.
And it is a death, in a way. The family I lived in, and for, doesn’t exist the same way anymore. And even if I don’t want it to exist like that anymore, even if I’ve been encouraging the changes, it’s still a loss.
***
And it’s not just about the bedroom remodel, either, even though that’s what my angst fixates on. It’s about the house, or me in the house.
When we bought this place, it was for us, and us back then meant two parents, three children, and a fourth in utero. Always, this house has been our family’s.
What does it mean to reclaim space that was never meant for just two?
***
When two single parents join households, it’s often advised they get a new space to prevent one spouse from living in the shadow of the former. A new place clears the air and sets them both on equal footing.
So if my husband and I bought this house for our family, maybe we need a new place that’s just for us? A place we can start fresh?
We’re not going to do that, of course. That’d be silly, this is our home. But with all the children gone, there’s a foreignness to this place.
I’m not sure if I belong, or how I belong.
***
It has occured to me that my fixer-upper excitement may be a coping technique. Jumping to remodel is my way of outpacing the pain of being left behind.
The flipside, I suppose, is the urge some parents have to preserve the child’s room as is, so when (if) the child returns, their room will be intact.
And probably there are some parents who don’t think much about it at all.
We all have our tactics.
***
So anyway, our baby has left home.
A couple nights ago, he sent a photo of the fish he caught with his housemate, and mornings before work, he sometimes sends me outfit-check photos to make sure he is appropriately attired. (He is.) Last I heard, he’s living on bagels and cereal and having a grand old time.
Today I went rug shopping.
This same time, years previous: onion relish, yoga sol, try and keep up, so much milk, in the bedroom, black lives matter, the quotidian (6.3.19), mama said, this is us, brown sugar rhubarb muffins, when the studies end.