coming home to an empty nest
by bam
the house i walked into the other day, upon return from faraway, was not the house i left. mostly, it looked the same. same pair of stools at the kitchen counter. same loose brick on the backdoor step. but here and there things were missing: coats no longer weighing down the coat hooks; size 12 shoes, all gone; the big ol’ speaker with the disco lights, the one parked beside the birdseed bin ever since last springtime’s college graduation, it had up and vanished.
and the silence was the loudest i had heard in a long, long while.
whilst i was away, there arrived an absence.
my beloved and i, for the first time in nearly 31 years, now dwell in an empty nest.
the younger fledgling has flown the coop. and we, the grownups, haven’t much clue what to do with the newborn stillness.
while i was off in the nation’s capital, puttering about Boy No. 1’s apartment, planting myself in the way back of his law school lecture hall, motoring about the countryside in search of sought-after antiques, Boy No. 2 set south for the ‘hood to which he was born.
he left behind a room that would be described as empty, if not for the torrent of assorted trinkets strewn in his wake. (it’s a collection of castoffs that counts among its contents a box of not-yet-dusty college paraphernalia, a half-burned chicago-scented candle (who knew?!), the oddest assortment of half-empty bottles and squeezed-dry tubes, outgrown clothes, and, yes, a tall stack of various welcome-home placards we’d penned upon his many returns over the years.)
as of one week ago, this old house boasts an official population of two and only two.
i, though, only stepped into the stillness the day before last––late to the game, as i so often am. my mate, the boy’s papa, has had a six-day jump on the vast emptiness, and he deems it a “sad, sad” state of being.
we just plain miss the kid, is the gist of it.
and while a piece of me is feeling the pangs, i’m just as keenly approaching this new endeavor as if a room to which i’d never before entered. i’ve always known it was there at the end of the hall but the knob hadn’t yet turned, and so as i now tiptoe about, peeking into its nooks and crannies, i am still getting to know my way.
for starters, the quiet. the pared-down daily rhythms (no more nightly shuttle of the old sedan to park it near the train once the meters dozed off at 9 p.m., and where it awaited the boy’s 1:05 a.m. arrival from downtown, thus sparing him a long-enough walk in the cold and the dark and whatever the weather gods chose to hurl on his route). no more rushing to throw some semblance of breakfast in a rumpled brown bag as he raced off to work and we all held our breath that he’d beat the train to the station. (and, yes, yes, if you’re starting to catch on that we might be among the dotingest parents that ever there were, we plead utterly guilty.)
did i mention the newfound dearth of laundry? or the fact that the cupboards look to be barer than ever before?
in that way that the mind plays tricks, as it wraps itself around those episodes in life it’s not before encountered (after a birth, a death, a diagnosis), i find it playing a form of peek-a-boo. an almost haunting hide-and-seek. i forget the kid is not asleep behind the bedroom door. wake up and skip a beat or two till i remember not to check that he made it home the night before. remind myself there’s no need to leave the porch light on when i tiptoe off to sleep.
in this day and age, where youngins come and go till their middlings or older, this new empire of emptiness cannot be called an inevitable geography. while the college years gave us a taste of it, this time round it seems a sharper, bolder border, a less permeable line than the empty nest of yore, when the emptiness ebbed and flowed according to academic calendar.
this time the kid is paying his own utilities, and sending off a monthly check to the landlord. and except for the comfy armchair and the rug he whisked from his upstairs room, he needs us not in his domestic equation.
and while he whistles the freedom song, his papa and i are fumbling in a fog across the contours of this new state of being. largely, i find myself deeply curious, and admit to something of a relieved sigh that i no longer will wake in the night to be sure i hear him clomping up the stairs.
time turns and turns in labyrinthine spirals, and with every twist we see ourselves from whole new angles. though i know full well that parenting is a post without pause, and one i intend to hold onto till my very last breath, this empty nestiness allows for––begs for––a whole new deepening. we’re a duet again, his papa and i, and on our own to chart our days. indeed, it’s solitude i’ll oft befriend.
which makes me think that now must be the hour in a lifetime when our soul begins its quickening, something of a leavening, with more hours to read, more years to remember, heavier questions to ponder. my prayer is that with the quiescence there comes a gathering of deeper grace.
of course, it aches a bit to think we’re past the years where cacophony was a daily occurence. where my hours were filled with comings and goings, and assorted bunches of kids clumped in the basement or were planted in sleeping bags or stuffed in the way back of the old red wagon. where an hour to myself was both rarity and marvel.
but maybe, just maybe, the quiet that’s tiptoed in will point the way toward the wise old lady i’ve always wanted to become.
and let us indulge in a glistening bit of mary O here this morning. an old favorite, something that indeed kills me with delight….
Mindful
by Mary Oliver
Every day
I see or hear
something
that more or less
kills me
with delight,
that leaves me
like a needle
in the haystack
of light.
It is what I was born for—
to look, to listen,
to lose myself
inside this soft world—
to instruct myself
over and over
in joy,
and acclamation.
Nor am I talking
about the exceptional,
the fearful, the dreadful,
the very extravagant—
but of the ordinary,
the common, the very drab,
the daily presentations.
Oh, good scholar,
I say to myself,
how can you help
but grow wise
with such teachings
as these—
the untrimmable light,
of the world,
the ocean’s shine,
the prayers that are made
out of grass?
how did you navigate through the rocks and shoals of those uncharted landscapes life has surely thrown your way?


BAM, your beautiful and heartfelt post brings me back to our empty nest days years ago! My deepest memory is not being able to walk into our daughter’s room alone after she left. I needed the brace and comfort of my hubby accompanying me to look around and reminisce and treasure and already miss her!
We then made a list of 20 things we wanted to do together, just the 2 of us, and posted it on the fridge. Yep, we did check them all off over the first couple of years.
Truly a turning point in the cycle of parenting and life!
xoxox
ohhhh, that is SO sweet, the list of 20 things. since i was entrenched in shlepping the last loads of the move yesterday, i realize i am still catching my breath on that. but the idea of a list is lovely……i LOVE that you checked off every thing. you are a wise soul, my friend. a wise and LOVING soul. xoxox
The empty nest was a tough one for us. The quiet was so very strange at first. And the lack of laundry still seems odd. But we gradually adjusted. And you will also. I think it takes some time.
i think a gremlin just ate my reply. in short, and in duplicate: yes, yes, the next leg of the journey begins with each small step. and indeed it is a curious thing to be caught in the tug of war between loving the quiet and the calm and simultaneously missing the sound of footsteps and showers running and the fridge being opened at all hours. life is adventure. ever uncharted.
Such a beautiful description of the very beginning of this phase of your life. As one who has been there, I can attest to still pausing in the doorway of each empty room almost every day, envisioning the family members who stood, slept, and studied there. But I also know that in no time at all, you will settle into a home for two as well as a completely different daily schedule. Enjoy.
Ohhhhhh…the silence is so odd right? It is a rolling kinda experience we have found. They leave but they are will be back for a little or alot. And every time they are back for that little or alot time, and then slip out the door back to their worlds….well we have a bit of that original melancholy pinging in the heart. It is especially poignant when something is left behind to be discovered a day or two later and so it is a two beat melancholy felt all over again.
Now the “returns” include partners, a grandchild, and dogs. It can be pretty chaotic at points. So to be honest, at this point we are settled into our quiet days and rhythms. So now we are sad AND a bit relieved to see them off. But we always looking forward to the next visit.
To every thing turn, turn…. ♥️
was reflecting on my own thoughts and am thinking it was in the letting go that we filled up.
yes, yes, the boy was here just yesterday, for grilled cheese and a few more loads of things that had been left behind. by the time night fell we were multiple loads in. and the grilled cheese i got to slip in under his nose was one of the most heavenly ones i’d made in a long long while. we turn and turn and turn….
ohhhhh, your apt mention of pausing at the door brought tears to my eyes. oh, dear. so much swirls inside each of us of the human species. and we are joined so often by those chords we share. i love the image of mothers everywhere pausing at the doorway of now empty rooms, sifting through the sounds and scenes that once filled those four walls…..
bless you.
[…] reader, fear not. at last writing, as i bemoaned the absence of progeny in this old house, and awoke to the relative quietude of life […]