luvavacation
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2006
- Messages
- 913
Nancygirl1, thank you for your post. This is my first morning alone in a quiet house, with my husband at work, since my daughters have left. Sure, the dogs have barked already, the cats wanted to be fed, but still, there was no one in the girls' bedrooms as I walked by, and no reason to keep the dogs from playing in the house in case someone wakes up
.
My youngest was bid farewell at college 4 hours away on Thursday night, and though there were many tears and the first 24 hours were hardest for her, she has found friends and is eager for classes to start today. I am relieved, for her greatest fear was being alone at college and having no friends.
My eldest was moved into her apartment and new life with her fiance on Saturday. All her furniture is gone, save her bed. I never knew her bedroom was so large! Her home will now be 3.5 hours away, my house will just be where she visits now.
She is my emotional child that wears her heart on her sleeve, and is having a hard time with this too, though she is happy to be with her fiance. Hopefully wedding planning and her graduate studies will keep her occupied to take her mind off her fear of the future, for she is not one that likes change, but change is a must for life to move forward.
And that is what I keep telling myself. Life must move forward. I hate the reality. I want my little girls, I am not ready for this yet! But I know I am not alone. I am happy they have their lives ahead of them, and have the opportunities to do what makes them whole. But I still mourn the loss of them being around.
Everything you said, Nancygirl1, resonates with me, including the part of crying with your husband. I have very rarely, in 25 years, seen my unemotional husband upset, but now I have seen him shed tears for his daughters and the changes in our lives. I know we will make it through, even if we find we can't stand each other without our daughters around
. We just need to make it through the next few weeks, perhaps months, until we are used to our new reality of life. And stay away from the grocery store so I don't feel sad when I see the green apples I always had to buy for my youngest, or the ice cream my eldest loved! No grocery stores! 

My youngest was bid farewell at college 4 hours away on Thursday night, and though there were many tears and the first 24 hours were hardest for her, she has found friends and is eager for classes to start today. I am relieved, for her greatest fear was being alone at college and having no friends.
My eldest was moved into her apartment and new life with her fiance on Saturday. All her furniture is gone, save her bed. I never knew her bedroom was so large! Her home will now be 3.5 hours away, my house will just be where she visits now.

And that is what I keep telling myself. Life must move forward. I hate the reality. I want my little girls, I am not ready for this yet! But I know I am not alone. I am happy they have their lives ahead of them, and have the opportunities to do what makes them whole. But I still mourn the loss of them being around.
Everything you said, Nancygirl1, resonates with me, including the part of crying with your husband. I have very rarely, in 25 years, seen my unemotional husband upset, but now I have seen him shed tears for his daughters and the changes in our lives. I know we will make it through, even if we find we can't stand each other without our daughters around

