Mothering is filled with both blessings and pain. Not too long ago, one of my children was estranged from me. It was not how I envisioned a relationship with an adult child. At the time, I wasn’t completely sure where she was living and had no reliable way to contact her.
Even the word “estranged” was foreign to me. I had invested my life into mothering. And this child turned away from me. It was not easy to admit. I’m the one who has written books about parenting. In the depth of this situation, those books mocked me. I was humbled and laid low in the dust.
Some things have healed. The lost sheep has returned home, and even more issues have surfaced. Most days, I am again both saddened and gladdened. As I am now in the process of writing a book about my experience, I am learning that there are many of us wounded mamas. Our numbers are legion. You are not alone!
One parenting expert, Debbie Pincus, offers these soothing words: “Cutting off is a way people manage anxiety when they don’t know a better way. The love and caring is there; the ability to solve differences is not. You did not cause your child to turn away. That was her decision.”
Yet we admit we all made so many mistakes, took so many missteps. She has come home and gone again more times than I can count. Will we be estranged again in the future? The horror and the certainty of it hang over my heart. In her mind, the distance lessened the conflict. She didn’t have to deal with me or the rest of the family. In reality, it has caused far more damage for everyone.
The best thing I can do as a parent is to own what I own – recognize the mistakes I have made – and try to seek my own healing from the wound. I remind myself – it was her choice to leave.
I tried to move on with my life. I moved with a limp that constantly reminded me of how much I missed her and what a hole she left. There are many more of us mamas who live with this pain. You may not know them because they are silent. The shame and embarrassment of the situation are too much to bear.
It would be one thing if you had abused your child. Then the adult disengagement would be a healthy move. But with no such backdrop, I don’t think fleeing adult children understand or appreciate the heartbreak caused by their actions. Or if they do understand, there is a lack of feeling or empathy for the other.
Through thick and thin in life, your mother is your mother. You can merely tolerate her, or you can treasure her. The worst thing you can do is discard her.
If you are one of us hurting mamas, the wisest thing you can do comes from author Sheri McGregor. She says to tend to your heartache, noting that “In acknowledging and tending to our hurt, we honor ourselves. That might then free us up to enjoy the way our loved ones want to honor us. Or to simply enjoy the day.”
Put another way, don’t let one empty chair make you neglect your full table. It’s okay to switch up your Mother’s Day traditions. Spend the time you need to work with your emotions, but then get on with the day.
McGregor says we have to do what’s right for us. “If that means you didn’t celebrate Mother’s Day this year, that’s okay. Recognize what you need and honor yourself in that way.”
Then treat yourself to a manicure, haircut, massage, or new outfit. Soon the day will be over, and you can go another year before having to see those upsetting greeting card commercials on television.
At some point, it’s time to start putting the pieces of your life back together. Even if you’re not feeling it, there are some things to remember to help you to get life going again.
Everyone goes through challenging times – they just don’t tend to advertise it. If you are a member of the Parents of Estranged Adult Children Facebook group, you may be surprised at our numbers. We are a fellowship of pain. There are people on the same journey who understand and can sympathize. You can connect and feel less alone.
There’s no doubt that you will need time to experience all the feelings that come about with a major life change like estrangement.
Give yourself a break from all the unimportant or non-urgent things that tend to fill up life. Just take it easy and heal your heart. Can you get away for a time to rest and reflect?
Usually, when there is something like this in our lives, we know deep down we must accept it. But we often don’t want to face it. It’s a great time to go inward and see what we can release.
It’s difficult to cut loose things that we once treasured or felt identified us, such as the dream of a lifetime of family closeness. Allow yourself to feel the sadness of letting them go.
It’s okay to feel sad. In fact, it’s very normal and appropriate. Experiencing all your feelings about the thing is a way to ensure that you can fully release it.
Do all the crying you need to do, but then get up and do something new.
Our children will always live and love in our hearts. But we must let go of our negative emotions and our expectations we may have had for them or our relationship with them.
Some parents find it helpful to have a ritual or ceremony where they release these thoughts and feelings into the universe. Maybe you can release some balloons – or burn your journal where you have written down all your pain.
You can do this for YOU – for your own healing. Give yourself permission to move beyond the pain.
You can also write them a letter (that you will never send) where you express all your sadness and grief and tell them that you are letting them go. You can then go ahead and burn this letter as you process your letting go.
While you surely have friends and family who are loving and supportive, it’s also possible that there are a few negative people in your environment also.
Especially now, it’s a good idea to say no to their invitations to hang out or chat. When you feel stronger, you can decide if they are someone you want to continue to have a relationship with. But for now, just say no – as nicely as you can.
Remember that your focus now can no longer be on fixing your child, fixing the relationship or bailing your child out of some trouble. You have had enough of that. It is time to work on your own healing and moving on with your life. It’s not selfishness. It’s grabbing and savoring all that is still good in life. A wonderful, full life still awaits you.
Dr. Henry Cloud and John Townsend are authors who have done a series of books on boundaries. In sum, a boundary helps me to define what is me, and what is not me. They say, “A boundary shows me where I end and someone else begins, leading me to a sense of ownership.”
A good boundary established in a relationship makes clear what I am responsible for, and what the other person is responsible for. Our children want to constantly push those boundaries.
When an adult child nags or guilts us into assuming responsibility for their problems or issues, then we may have a boundary issue.
In my efforts to “fix” my adult child, I was making myself sick. While I was doing what I thought “good moms” do, I was violating both my boundaries and my child’s boundaries. The result? We each got unhealthier.
I truly believed I could handle my adult child’s estrangement on my own. After all, I had dealt with countless personal and family issues: my ex-spouse’s cancer, infertility, kids with learning issues, my own struggle with depression, and more. While I coped, these all took their toll.
Like many other stories, my child’s issues began to surface when she was in her late teens. Because she was my first child, I was ill-equipped to distinguish between normal teen behavior and something more serious. I also chalked things up to “adoption issues” and immaturity, while in truth, they should have raised red flags.
When life was spinning out of control with simultaneous family bombs exploding all around me, my depression and anxiety became too much to bear. I checked myself into a three-week program available in my area at Meier Clinics, a Christian counseling service.
I spent those three weeks learning concepts that were new to me.
In addition to working on boundaries, that intensive therapy helped me to remember that I was not defined by the choices of my children or my (then) spouse. In fact, the more I sought to change, help or fix them, the more I lost of myself.
Many wonderful mothers may run into trouble when they have sought to be good moms and have defined themselves by being a mom.
The reality for each of us is that we are so much more than just a mom. We are unique women with our own interests, talents, desires, dreams, hopes and fears.
When we focus solely on our identity as a mom, and being a mom turns out to be challenging or we are outright rejected by our child, we are bereft because we have not developed all those wonderful aspects of ourselves and our lives.
My three weeks of intensive therapy did me a lot of good, no doubt. But as the high-stress years of challenging parenting dragged on, I became really good at handling crises.
Unfortunately, I also developed some behaviors and symptoms that represented the pain I was carrying. When coping on my own and stuffing my feelings inside became less effective, I stopped being able to sleep.
Remember the infant years when you felt at loose ends because your baby kept you up all night? When your child is troubled or estranged, they can still keep you up at night! At the height of my struggle with insomnia, I was taking three sleeping meds every night and still only got a few hours of restless sleep.
At this point, I had learned about boundaries and understood more about my own depression. But the insomnia was rearing its head to tell me there was more to be dealt with. If we listen to our bodies and our minds, they will tell us when something is wrong.
If we get professional help to delve deeper into what our bodies and minds are telling us, and explore that territory freely and fearlessly, we will encounter deeper issues. Dealt with, the work can lead to deep healing and health.
My psychiatrist’s solution to insomnia was to give me three sleeping meds. When I found myself living in a daze in my waking hours and still not sleeping, I realized the conventional method was no longer acceptable to me. So, I decided to try something different.
I chose hypnosis. Hypnosis has a proven record of helping people quit smoking, lose weight, become better speakers – and learn to sleep without medication.
I didn’t like it at first. It felt so foreign to my in-control coping mechanisms. But I made a decision to enter into the process wholeheartedly, and I found great healing therein.
I chose to consult with Ryan Elliott, MSW, a parent of an estranged child himself, who is also active in our Facebook group, Parents of Estranged Adult Children. Through my work with him, I have completely changed my life, and I am eternally grateful.
If you are drowning in pain over your child’s estrangement, it is time to try something new. If you are led to therapy, find someone you connect with and enter fully into the process. Don’t hide, minimize, rationalize or deny.
This pain sucks. If you don’t take it out and look at it, it will destroy you.
I want to assure you – there is life beyond the pain. You will always love your child, but letting their estrangement ruin your life serves no one and does not solve the problem.
The solution for you might be found in therapy. It could be the most important step you take for yourself.
Online therapy has become quite common and may be a good resource for you if you don’t have easy access to qualified therapists in your area. Websites like Better Help match you with a therapist according to your needs. They offer phone, video, or chat options to communicate and sessions are scheduled according to your needs and budget.
One of our Sixty & Me readers commented that she is writing in a journal on a regular basis to her granddaughter that she doesn’t know because of her estranged daughter. She is writing about her everyday life in hopes that her granddaughter may read it when she is old enough. She mentioned that she has no intention of talking lowly of her daughter but instead writes fun stories and anecdotes of her from when she was growing up.
Another reader said that she began working helping people and that it made her feel better. Taking care of others made the thoughts of her estranged child more bearable and filled the missing gap.
Look into volunteer work in your community. Food kitchens, animal shelters, and senior care homes are always welcoming volunteers to help out with daily activities. While helping others you will help yourself.
Read THE DETACHMENT WALL: HOW TO LET GO OF YOUR ADULT CHILDREN.
Also HOW TO PLAN YOUR ELDERLY CARE IF YOU DON’T HAVE CHILDREN OR A SPOUSE
Are you a mother with an estranged adult child? What do you do to deal with anniversaries and days that highlight the loss? What have you found helps you move forward? Please join the conversation.
Our son unfortunately married a narcissist who from the start worked to cut us off from him. It’s all about her family. Last time we saw him was 2015. The narcissist is a Filipina who is a JP citizen where our son is based with the military.
What we’ve done to move on is to cut contact. Anytime we tried to make contact with him before, and even tried to remain neutral with her, she would bring up something, anything to cause another rift between us. So, last we tried to talk to him and when something was brought up causing an argument he tried to flip it onto us by saying he was cutting contact. So, we in turn basically told him how we felt about her, and that he was to not contact us. Since then she has tried everything possible to try and gaslight through social media postings. Even having their first child and trying to manipulate and gaslight through social media. She went through our son’s last conversation with him and would post comments under pics on social media trying to gaslight and put her two pence worth in.
We have no social media accounts because we have decided to move on. We have retired, so we have started gardening. We go visit museums and historical places taking our grandson from another one of our kids whom we are raising. He is a blessing to us. We work on hobbies when we can, and it is important to work on one’s self inside and out. One can only control themselves. It’s them, not you. Narcissist want to manipulate, control and have narcissistic supply. It’s all about me, myself and I, and if one watches it’s about look at me, look at me on social media where they constantly post pictures of themselves and the ones they are controlling in order to create a triangle 📐 to try and gaslight those they cannot control or get through their boundaries.
We pray for our son that one day he will see through what is going on, but that’s all really one can do.
Until that time, we move on, take care of ourselves and enjoy life ❤️
We are estranged from our son. While we noted he was becoming more distant from us at around age 10, we really never saw it as much as when we visited him where he was living in another city 2 years ago. He seemed resentful that we were there. Two weeks later he visited our city for a wedding and we planned to see them for dinner one night, but I ended up with one of my many severe migraines and canceled. He and his wife became enraged and that was the end of our communications, but he made sure we knew that he felt we took away his childhood as a result of a moment around age 10 when my husband, when disciplining him, poked him in the chest. His wife has not spoken to any of her family in decades. I am devasted and think I (and my husband) have rationalized the situation by saying to ourselves that he changed at some point to a completely different person than the one we knew as a child, but then become extremely emotional and upset very frequently. What tools am I missing to be able to cope?
I walk on both sides of this fence. My parents gave me the necessities as a kid and when I grew up I did not need them in my life. I just moved out and that was that with a visit every once in a while and a phone call.
Now as a dad my daughter has taken off in the same manner. Two years and I have not heard from her.
I spent time talking with her as she grew up and went to college about the family dynamic and she listened. Apparently she had different ideas and left w/o explanation other than “I need my boundaries respected”.
It’s a puzzle for sure. I get it but I don’t get it. She always looked after me and helped me as I did the same for her…then poof, gone. I think she is too timid to speak up or explain why she has vanished from my life. I obviously had many blind spots and lacked awareness. Too bad I learned that after it was too late.
But in the end, I get it…I did the same.
Hello everyone. I haven’t heard from my adult daughter in over three years and have not seen her for almost 5 years. She stopped all contact with no explanation. I would like to make the changes that she needs but don’t know what they are. I want to grow as a person and find a way to deal with my broken heart. I started to drink to kill the pain and ended up drinking way too much, and in the process seriously damaged my relationship with my adult son. I feel so terrible about this and beat myself up everyday. I have dealt with the alcohol abuse but can’t seem to manage the pain in my heart. I want to cry all the time, I worry so much that something will happen to her and then there will be no hope of seeing her again at all. I worry that I won’t be able to mend things with my son. I feel the pressure of my life clock. I try to console myself that she is doing well in university (google search showed she was on the honour roll) and wish her nothing but happiness. I want her to live without me if she is happier that way – my son too of course. I just hurt so much. I love her (and him) so much. My children have always meant everything to me. I need to find a way to live without her and heal the relationship with my son. Some days I feel like I can’t go on.