Martin Luther said, “You cannot keep birds from flying over your head, but you can keep them from building a nest in your hair.”
He believed that there is healing power in acceptance and refusing to be drawn into other people’s drama.
Today, I want to talk about how estranged mothers can also find acceptance and healing.
Remember the Serenity Prayer? It says, “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”
When we say that prayer, we seek serenity, which is defined as the state of being calm, peaceful and untroubled. Isn’t that what we all want?
If that serenity could be achieved by crying, arguing or carrying on, hurting mamas would be pretty serene.
But that’s not how serenity is attained. It’s attained by accepting what you cannot change and learning to know the difference. It’s attained by living with an outcome that you don’t care for, while retaining your own inner peace and joy.
The point is that we have to accept some problems, some situations, and learn to live with them. It’s an acknowledgment that the road ahead will not be rosy, but if you accept it, you can learn to move on in your life.
This inability to accept and move on can be a stumbling block for struggling or estranged mamas. We want to resist and fight and turn over every stone and possibility to try to change the way things are.
A Buddhist would advise us to stop resisting and find acceptance. Life always changes. A part of the beauty of life is that it’s unpredictable. Nothing here in this realm is permanent.
Can we learn to look at change through a positive mindset? If everything in life was always the same, we would stagnate and stop growing.
In our society, we watch way too many TV shows where the problems or dilemmas are wrapped up in a tidy 30 or 60 minutes.
In our real lives, not every problem is solvable. We may not have control over every facet of our lives. What we can control is how we react to these obstacles and whether we accept them or struggle against them.
When we struggle against them, we beat our heads against a wall. It doesn’t change the situation, and it leaves us with a headache.
I often think about how people with chronic illness cope. There are some that fight and fight and try every new medicine and untested procedure under the sun. For others, acceptance that there is an illness, it’s chronic and there’s nothing that can be done about it can be the beginning of freedom.
Accepting an illness doesn’t change the fact that you or a loved one may be ill, but it frees you from that extra layer of suffering. It allows you to accept the situation and roll with it. Now comes the creativity – how can you enjoy life under this new set of circumstances?
If you are living with that extra layer of suffering, like a child who becomes estranged from the family, who does it help to continually fight against it?
Your suffering will not cause your child to change. Chances are, they are so caught up in their own drama that they do not even notice your distress, much less care about it.
So, you have a choice: futility or freedom.
You can invest your energy and your tears in a situation that appears futile (reconciliation with your adult child), or you can reach for freedom by letting go of the painful ties that keep you miserable.
Does that mean you are giving up on your child? Absolutely not. Rather, it means understanding that this is something that can’t be changed by your suffering. Stopping the continuous battle can save you energy and grief and allow you to focus on things that you can change.
The thing that you CAN change is whether you will choose to live the rest of your life in misery, or choose joy and freedom.
It takes some creativity. It takes acknowledging that the birds are circling your head, but refusing to let them build a nest.
The next time you find yourself drowning in the grief of having an estranged child, consider whether or not this situation is something you can change. If you can’t, consider simply accepting it and moving on.
Paddling upstream, fighting wave after wave against a rough current, is difficult and not the way the river is supposed to flow. It exhausts you. Follow the current, glide with the river and accept your situation.
You are not giving up hope. But you are giving up control over the outcome.
You might find that choosing freedom over futility will not only make life easier, but also much more enjoyable. You deserve to put pain behind you and reach for contentment and joy.
Find more on this topic in our Estrangement column.
Do you know anyone who is an estranged mother? What did they do to find acceptance and healing? Have you been in pain long enough over a situation that you cannot change? Does it benefit you to continue in pain? What are some small steps you can take toward freedom? Please share your thoughts below!
Tags Adult Children
“You are not giving up hope. But you are giving up control of the outcome”. I love this. This will be my mantra for the day. Thank you.
I’ve struggled for years. Estrangement from my daughter who was always manic depressive is no easy plight. I’ve decided to give in. Sit back and enjoy my life. I occasionally think of her, look at photos on Facebook of my grand-daughter growing up and now I smile at her resemblance. It was tough but I pull through. Then my son began to display the same features. I’d call and ask for 5minutes a week to catch up and he reels into how the dog pooped on the rug and my grand-daughter won’t listen and how he hates his job and how he can’t believe I am so needy. Well, I’m done with him too. I will no longer send gifts, money, presents to the grand-kids and receive not even a thank you. Recently I was hospitalized for something that might have been serious. He barely contacted me, never sent even a card or maybe some flowers. It is so hurtful. Now I am no longer grieving. There is no explanation. My efforts are futile and so are anyone else’s who thinks it is curable. Live your life and I pray their children do the same one day to them. I always thought it must have been something I did. Now that I am in my 70’s I havenfriends suffer the same and are held in hope by the grandchildren. One day they will be cutoff so they walk on glass every day.
Hi Christine,
Thank you for commenting. Although estrangement is hurtful, I don’t think wishing the same to your kids will put you in a better position. Instead, bless them and pray for them. You never know what will make them do a 180.
I understand how she feels, Vanya. I think Christine simply wants them to understand the excruciating pain they have caused her. This is a safe place for you, Christine. If you need to vent your justified anger, you go right ahead, sweetheart! We love our children a lot more than they love us when they become adults. This is natural. The birds leave the nest. We are also not animals. We are human beings who are expected to observe certain basic moral behaviors in a civilized society. I also believe that God hears her pain and will not allow her children to escape without any repercussions, whether they be life lessons or punishment in the next life, unless, like the Prodigal Son, they repent sincerely and spend the rest of her time on this earth trying to make up for their extreme selfish cruelty to her. Nature has laws. Physics tells us that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. God has commandments. Disregard them at your own peril. She is wise to walk away from neglect, cruelty and selfishness in her twilight years. I think praying for them will only continue to remind her of her pain and make her sick. Maybe she should have a prayer vigil in private (like a private relationship funeral for closure) and put herself and the relationships in God’s hands and tell Him that she can not continue to ruminate, so this is her final prayer for them. In my opinion, when this occurs, time will lessen the pain and she should pray for her own peace instead when she hurts. If they ever grow up and fly right, I’m sure she will be there with open arms.
Thank you for this article. It resonated strongly with me as I’m estranged from my oldest child who has also kept my only grandchild away from me. The serenity prayer reminded me that this is certainly something I cannot change, but I’ll remain open to the idea of reconciliation should he ever reach out to me.
Thank you for the wise words. I am working hard to find myself through estrangement. I now know it is paramount for my emotional and physical health to be proactive and move forward past the grief, past the anger and bewilderment. I am so thankful every day for my understanding husband (not my estranged daughter’s father).
Thank you so much for the article on Estrangement. I am a mother who has become estranged from her beloved daughter. I have spent seven years trying to fix things, before I realized it is not something I can fix. It made me ill almost suicidal. Especially as I had always had a close and loving relationship with my daughter.
I do hope you produce more articles in the future on estrangement and family related issues
Thank you again.