There’s a certain kind of silence that falls over the house when your kids are grown. No more soccer practice. No more school pickups. No more late-night snack runs.
But there’s often something else that lingers in that silence: guilt.
For many moms, especially those in their second act of life, mom guilt doesn’t go away – it just evolves. It shifts from “Did I do enough today?” to “Did I mess them up?” It becomes a constant replay of past decisions, old conversations, missed moments, and heartfelt regrets.
Let’s talk about it.
In one form or another, yes. But the weight and shape of mom guilt have changed over time.
Historically, motherhood was rooted in survival: feed, protect, nurture, repeat. The guilt, if it showed up, was about whether a child was safe or cared for.
But in the modern world – especially in the age of parenting books, podcasts, Instagram reels, and expert advice – the expectations have multiplied. Now, we’re not just responsible for keeping our kids alive. We’re expected to raise emotionally fluent, intellectually curious, socially competent, well-adjusted humans who (preferably) adore us in return.
And if they don’t?
If they struggle, rebel, drift away, or express pain from their childhood?
We blame ourselves.
As our kids grow into adults, the mirror turns inward. They may start talking about their childhood differently than we remember it. Or they might be working through their own issues, and we hear the unsaid words: “This is your fault.”
We wonder:
We’re left with a haunting question:
Did I get it wrong?
Here’s what I’ve learned – not from a book, but from living it.
Don’t bury it. Guilt that festers unspoken becomes shame. Write it down. Speak it out loud. Start a conversation with a therapist, a trusted friend, or your journal.
Not everything your child struggles with is because of you. Yes, you made mistakes. Every parent does. But you also did the best you could with what you had at the time. Guilt doesn’t change the past – and it shouldn’t steal your present.
If you genuinely regret something, say so. Acknowledge it. But don’t let it become a never-ending loop of proving you’re sorry. At some point, your grown kids must do their own work. You can’t carry their healing for them.
You’re allowed to protect your peace. That may mean stepping back from painful conversations, refusing to be emotionally manipulated, or limiting interactions that drain you. Boundaries aren’t walls – they’re bridges to healthier relationships.
You’re not shaping lunches and bedtime routines anymore. You’re shaping legacy. That might look like evolving, listening differently, showing up in a new way. It might even look like letting go.
You can’t rewrite the past – but you can choose how you live the rest of your story.
You are more than the sum of your parenting mistakes.
You are a woman with wisdom, insight, and experience.
And even now, you’re still allowed to grow, repair, and heal – just like your children.
Maybe you need to give yourself the grace no one else ever offered.
Maybe the only person waiting for your forgiveness… is you.
Guilt will come.
But it doesn’t have to stay.
Let it teach you. Then let it go.
I would invite you to do two things today: Get a copy of the Second Act Soul Check-In available here. Then check in at our Empty Nesters Facebook Group. Join the conversation as we deconstruct these complex emotions. You are not alone.
Do you have your own story about how you have dealt with mom guilt? Please share it below.
Tags Adult Children
I love Christine’s work and say Amen to all of the above!
Thank you, this helps.
Oh my goodness! This is EXACTLY what I am going through right now. My 32-year-old son blames me for everything. I raised him alone, as my ex-husband (his father) left me early in my pregnancy. I feel I really was a good mom, and my son even admits it sometimes when he is not angry with me for some silly reason. His father was basically absent for the first six years of his life. He would visit with my son every now and then. Soon after my ex married again, he began getting my son every other weekend as requested by his new wife. The only thing I am guilty of is yelling sometime (who doesn’t?) and my son said that I had lots of boyfriends. Well, if his father had not abandoned me, I would not have had to date at all. I had three long term relationships while he was growing up. I never left him with a babysitter. There was no revolving door in my house with different men all of the time. I really have not dealt with it all, but I do know that I did the best I could. I worked hard, we never missed a meal, I owned my own home, and we had plenty of clothes to wear. We had many vacations together and did lots of fun activities together.
I always paid my bills, so we always had electricity and water running through our home. This article came at the right time! I am considering going to therapy, but I think my son needs therapy too. He refuses to go.
I went to lots of therapy, both before and after my divorce; and it was a life saver!
Excellent article. I needed this, thank you.
me too, I needed this too
Wonderful article! Eventhough my adult children are grown, on their own, and successfully living on their now, they still aren’t “settled” in life (chosen career path that’s satisfying, supportive partner, etc). Of course that makes me as a parent feel a twinge of discomfort. I wouldn’t call it guilt, just the uneasiness that comes with geetting older, recognizing your own mortality but without the comfort of knowing your offspring are in their best place in life. Letting go is harder when they’ve been such a part of you!
Well said.
Lisa, so true! Both of mine are grown and one is married with children and doing fine. The other one is successful professionally but doesn’t have a life partner. Plenty of friends, etc. but he lives half-way across the country from us and I would feel more at ease if he had “the person.” It’s just a mom thing.
Neither of mine has found “their person” but our son is on the West coast and we’re on the East coast, which really makes it harder for me. It shouldn’t, but you can’t change a mother’s heart! Thanks for understanding, feels good to know we’re not alone in this!