Empty Nest Syndrome: How Did I Get Through The Depression?
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What It Should Have Been....
This was the time I had spent many years looking forward to.........
After mothering three daughters, with an often absent father, I was finally going to have rest.
This new found freedom was supposed to bring me time to garden, can my vegetables, sew, do craft-works, read, whatever caught my fancy. Life was to be now at my beckoning.
Finally, with my home returned to me, I would write that novel. This was my time.
That is the way, I had always imagined it.
The way that I had imagined it, became my prison.
We Had Arrived
The undefinable American Dream was ours. We had put our name on it. A home with land, the youngest of three preparing to go to college. My career had been very lucrative, his business was still taking form, but it was prosperous and blooming. The world, or at least, what I expected from it was at my fingertips.
We Had Worked Hard
As a high school student, a coach, substituting, for a class that I can not remember, made the statement, " some people are paid for doing, and some people are paid for knowing". Even though, I can not remember the class, the profoundness of that statement struck me in my young tracks.........adults, beware, you never know how you influence the young!
A line was drawn in my youthful mind, doctors/plumbers.......nurses/secretaries......teachers/cooks........writers/readers.........
It may have even defined worth to me. Am I worthy for my knowing or for my doing?
My husband is a doer......he builds, he makes, he creates, he solves mechanical problems. I am a knower.....I research, I learn, I tell others what I learned. We formed a great team.
He commands a fantastic wage, yet it takes a very physical toll. In time, I too would command a great wage, but it took an emotional toll. We agreed on a plan, live on his earning, invest mine.
It worked, and it served us very well. Child-rearing was added to my duties. Worry was added to his.
What is the point?
I had this faboulus yard, and no one at home to enjoy it. An outdoor kitchen patio and no one to cook for. A garden to make my Granddad proud and no one to eat of its fruits.
I sank into a deep depression. Having grown up under the influence of brothers, I had little compassion for " womanly" complaints. They seemed to be excuses to me. ( so sorry sisters).
Empty nest syndrome? What a joke!
I would learn how empty the human heart can feel. It would be a hard lesson.
Looking back, I honestly, do not know how my husband endured it. He was going about his business as always.........if he called home, he was interrupting me, if he did not, he was ignoring me. The man must have been baffled. He trudged on, and on........
Even I knew I was being irrational. After weeks of unexplained, sadness, I sought medical help.
It is to my great fortunate that I met with a sympathetic nurse practitioner. She knew about menopause and the empty nest syndrome. She knew, that those who menstruate early in life, often go through an early menopause. She prescribed a mild anti-depressant.
Whoa, wait a minute! Aren't anti-depressants for those who can not control themselves? I took 3 tablets and the guilt took over. Yes, I felt guilty for needing help. I discarded the medications, my family must not know of this weakness. Surely, I can control my own mind!
It was not about the mind........
I made it so much harder than it had to be.
My husband continued to endure. My daughters were busy with college life. I was alone in the woods.
Reality Slapped Me In My Face!
I was going to be alone..............
After years of having children at my coat tail, and then employees calling my name........
There would be no one asking me for direction.
The deer would still eat the corn, the squirrels would still climb the trees, the birds would still fly, the grass would grow...........but no child would greet me, asking, " Mom, what do you want me to do today", no employee would say, " Miss Ylonda, do you want me on the floor or the cash register"............
No one needed me.
Never, since the age of four, when my Grandmother assigned me some kitchen chore, had I not been needed.............not once.
The world would work without me.
I was devastated!
I felt worthless.
I felt old.........yet, I was in my late 30's. Still young, and able to retire.
Healthy, vibrant, young, financially secure, retired, and OLD before 40! I was useless.
A Lovely Autum Morning
The morning sun awoke me. The air was warm. The small wildlife were at play. Taking my morning coffee, I went to the yard swing.
I was prepared to weep, again. There would be no one to tell me to hush or to call me a crybaby, in this rural setting. Privacy was my domain, and I would let the tears flow.
With warm coffee still in my mug, a butterfly lit on my hand.
This has happened to you before. It had certainly happened to me, bees, wasps, dragonflys as well.
But this would prove to be different.
This butterfly was content to reside there. I pulled my hand closer, closer, and still closer to my face. The transparency of its wings became evident.
So fragile, so delicate, a single blow could end it all.......yet, I did not dare.
I looked , first at the butterfly, then through it,........how could this tender and delicate thing, survive the storms of the winds, the snows of winter, the hard rains of spring? How? No answer came, yet, it did survive, despite the odds.
That butterfly probably spent 3 maybe 4 minutes on my hand. It stood steady as my hand brought it in for a closer look, then closer, retreating for a distant glance, back again, so close that I could actually see through its delicate wings. Through those wings, I could see the vegetable garden, the woods, the back yard...........turning all directions as my hand dictated, she stood steady.........
Finally, I understood,
there is still beauty in the world waiting to be seen.
Then, she took her flight.
I was healed. My life was not over, but it would take new directions.
In my sorrow.........
Through the butterfly, my spirit was reawakened......to new roads, new dreams, and another who would need me.
In time, my children would need me again.
Life, does indeed go on........
Just get through the storm, and the sun shines again. Use the tool that works for you.
When you are strong again, share your battle with another.
You are invited to read more.........
- onegoodwoman on HubPages
A small town southern girl, trying to learn from everyone I meet along the way, those who teach me about myself become my true friends. Some...
What Others Had to Say...........
thougtforce 43 hours ago
This was such an incredibly good description of how life suddenly stop and change. And it can almost seem like an insult when life outside goes on and on as if nothing has happened! When life is spinning at full speed with children and career there is no way to make time for yourself and it is difficult to maintain your social networks outside the family. An empty house, and much time is such a contrast. Your story shows that there is hope, you can get quality time for yourself once we get use to have time of our own! Oddly, one must constantly learn new things, nothing is obvious! I so enjoy reading this, it is very well written!
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Thank you onegoodwomen, I can relate to your story about the empty nest and epresseion; I also threw my medication away, but relaized that I realy did need it to pull my self together and get rid of the sadness I was experiencing. The medicine help me overcome my depression and get on with my life. I even got married again. Thank you for sharing. Godspeed. creativeone59
I didn't expect the empty nest depression/anxiety either. Our teens gave us a pretty hard time and I anticipated relief as they launched into taking responsibility for their own lives and moving on their own.
But strangely after the youngest one, who gave us the most trouble, left I couldn't seem to find my place in the world.
I really identified with when your husband would call he was interrupting you and when he didn't call he was ignoring you. That is how it is.
enjoyable read.
Enjoyed this Yvonne. Thanks for your transparency. A few years ago before my nest truly became empty I found myself alone suddenly. My 2 sons who were still in high school went to calif. To live with my family and go to school there for a year. My daughter left for a month and my husband went to work out of state. I woke the next morning to the echo of my lone voice. I was stunned at how hollow a house can become when those that make it home are no longer there. I didn't realize it until now that God was actually preparing me for what was to actually come a few years down the road. Bless you dear friend and pray you have nestled into to your new nest.
onegoodwoman: Thank you for sharing this. God has a way for easing all suffering, if we are patient and willing to let him.
I always enjoy reading your hubs, you think deeply and I love that. The only way we can learn and to grow through and out of life's struggles is to think deeply, and then consult the maker of the mind and soul and heart. I love the way he can speak to us and turn us in different directions through dreams, or words from others, or even beautiful butterflies. Be blessed!
This was such an incredibly good description of how life suddenly stop and change. And it can almost seem like an insult when life outside goes on and on as if nothing has happened! When life is spinning at full speed with children and career there is no way to make time for yourself and it is difficult to maintain your social networks outside the family. An empty house, and much time is such a contrast. Your story shows that there is hope, you can get quality time for yourself once we get use to have time of our own! Oddly, one must constantly learn new things, nothing is obvious! I so enjoy reading this, it is very well written!
Hey onegoodwoman: I can feel your pain. I have 3 daughters too. The oldest got married last year, the middle moved to her own apartment.. not far away but has a great career. The youngest will finish college in May 2011. She tried going to a school out of town but didn't like it. She came home and found a school she does enjoy and she told me last week that she plans to move out fairly soon after graduation. She already has a great job that she works part-time after school and will go full time after graduation. I am so blessed to have wonderful relatinship with my girls but I also realized that they are grown. So I am trying to prepare myself for yet another transition. I am finding new interest in life and through prayer God is already preparing me for what I know will truly come. "An empty nest" God Bless you.
I felt the empty nest when my two older children
left home. It was sad and then I enjoyed the freedom.
We can't see into the future so we don't know what
life has in store for us. My third child is a special
needs child sent to us from heaven. He is a blessing
but is also enormously needy and time consuming. We also
now have in our middle and older ages an adopted child
who started to kindergarten this past August. He goes
to school where I teach. I would not trade the two
boys for anything but admittedly I do sometimes feel
over whelmed with their needs on top of a full time
job and household demands. Our special child will be
with us for he will always be a child or at least shall
be childlike. The younger boy has only begone the 13
year journey of public school. So it is to be that
my husband and I will not have an empty nest. There will
not be those idle days with which to renew our bond
without children. This is not the way I planned it. We
were to enjoy raising our children and then we were to
travel and explore. But God had different plans for us
and the hard earned accomplishment of our special child
and the humorous grin of our six year old fill our
hearts with joy. It is not what we planned but our
cup runneth over.
My first wife and I had 3 sons. I couldn't wait to get them out on their own, let them grow up and leave us as empty nesters.
What a wonderful story you have shared with us Ylonda. I can empathise in a way and have had to learn how to deal with the empty nest at an early age and again after my baby died followed not longer after by the early onset of menopause and the depression that accompanied all that transpired before it.
Butterflies, bees, wasps, birds, wildlife and pets have all encouraged me at times to breathe long enough to see another day. Our purpose continues to shift as each new day arrives and it is up to us to embrace it instead of trying to fight the current.
Beautifully written article-it struck a chord:)
It's a journey indeed when empty nest hits home. Sometimes it takes time - I could relate to your description of having a patio and no one to cook for...I had several experiences similar to yours. My response was to start a website! Hope you'll visit - lots of helpful info as you keep movin' forward! http://www.fiftyisthenewforty.net/family/
She is mother, she is wife, she is servant, she is daughter, she is friend, she is lover. She is giving, forever giving. What awesome God created such a being that giving would be her life and so little time for taking. In the end, that life be measured from the giving, I suspect a mothers greatest glow has yet to come.
Magnificent!!!!! Such passion and at last-understanding.I lost my parents several years ago and my feelings were quite similiar- perhaps I was feeling grief, I don't know. I do know the feeling of loss, whether it be real or perceived.You have so much, you get to see those wonderful girls AND do your own thing. I am happy for you.
This is a beautiful story and you are a beautiful person. I commend you for sharing your personal struggles and life experiences with the rest of the world, that takes courage. I say to you what my loving ex-girlfriend said to me after we broke up, "you'll be alright."
What a beautiful and inspiring hub. So glad that butterfly lit on your hand and enlightened you to the beauty of life and the empty nest. After all, the nest is really never empty. My wife and I have a 34 year old daughter and a 27 year old son who have long ago left our home but are still very, very much a part of our daily lives. So, I can relate to your story. Voted up and beautiful and will return again to read this hub whenever needed. Thanks for sharing!
Beautiful and touching.
When things start to get overwhelming, I go look at my fruit trees, my honeybees, then lay in the green grass, bask in the sun and let Mother Earth embrace me and wash away all that troubles me. It is cathartic. It gives me the strength to get up renewed and refreshed, confident. Knowing that I am a part of of something greater. Determined to get going again.
Peace to you.
I was a long time since I read this but I read it again tonight. I have battled Major Depression for 14 years. I have never stopped feeling guilty about taking those meds, as it went completely against everything my mother told me. I was definately ashamed that I could not survive normally without them. I still have days when the depression creeps up on me and knocks me up side the head, but I am not a quitter I keep fighting and have found renewed strenght and outlets to keep me on track.I have a closer relationship with Christ too.


























noturningback Level 4 Commenter 16 months ago
Not there yet with my own daughter. Would have had 3 more if not miscarried, not going to second guess why they never came, just a sense of longing and I guess a feeling of being deprived.
So I found comfort in something I had already been doing, helping others and of course as always happens, at least with me, I have plenty of opportunities and not enough time.
There were plenty of children at my church, some without a father nearby, now we are both better off. Out of my loss, I found others in need and now we have each benefited.