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The Detachment Wall: How to Let Go of Your Adult Children

By Christine Field May 05, 2023 Family

Some of us moms have a problem with our attachment to our children, to the point where the bond can become unhealthy.

Can we love our children but not let their choices or behavior make us crazy? Is some detachment actually a good idea?

Is Detachment a Wall?

The idea of detaching from a person can seem terrifying. But is there a way to practice healthy detachment?

Another way of thinking about it is this – when we live detached, we are not placing a wall between us and others. Instead, we are examining our own expectations and dependencies.

With those in perspective, we are freer to love another person because the focus is shifted to them and is not solely on us.

With our adult children, though we love them unconditionally, we try to satisfy unmet needs in us:

  • Our need to be needed.
  • Our desire to nurture someone.
  • Our desire to see that our work and love produces an effect – a child who loves us back.

What we often do is keep a picture in our minds of our child and how they will fulfill these needs and desires for us. What happens when that child rejects us? In my case, and for many other moms, we completely freak out!

What Went Wrong

When we are ‘good mothers,’ we begin to define ourselves by our mothering. While this can be positive and can encourage us to fulfill our role responsibly, by totally adopting that definition we can forget all the other aspects of ‘me.’

When we are our role, when that role is challenging, or when that role is over, what is left of ‘us’?

In dealing with estranged children, we still tend to look within ourselves. We ask ourselves what we did wrong. We obsess over every interaction and question whether we could have responded differently.

Read HOW TO DIVORCE YOUR ADULT CHILDREN AND RESTORE YOUR SANITY.

Also read HOW TO DEAL WITH HAVING AN ESTRANGED ADULT CHILD.

This Monday-morning quarterbacking neglects some basic facts about humans:

You Can’t Control Other People

We surely have influence over our children, but we do not mold them like clay. When they don’t turn out the way we planned, we neglect this fundamental truth.

The Power of Letting Go: How to drop everything that’s holding you back

The Power of Letting Go: How to drop everything that’s holding you back on Amazon

You Can’t Rely on Your Children for Your Happiness

We may have looked ahead to our golden years and seen ourselves surrounded by loving grandchildren. This neglects another fundamental truth: People change. If we rely on other people for our happiness, we may be disappointed.

My source of joy and happiness is an inside job, not dependent on the actions of others.

Find Your Joy: A Powerful Self-Care Journal to Help You Thrive on Amazon

Find Your Joy: A Powerful Self-Care Journal to Help You Thrive on Amazon

Your Emptiness Is Yours to Fill Up

Your adult children don’t exist solely to fill the void of your unmet needs. Do you need the love and admiration of children and grandchildren to be happy? Perhaps meeting your own needs by loving yourself sufficiently will bring more peace and satisfaction.

Complete People Can Love Completely

I remember well the first time my young daughter gushed about a new boyfriend, saying, “He completes me!” We had many long talks deep into the night discussing how love can be real and true only when two people who are complete within themselves come together.

True love rejects the notion that the other exists solely to please you. True love is therefore not threatened when the other displeases you, because the love is not dependent on the other fulfilling your needs.

Having the other person conform to our desires so we will love them is manipulation, not love. Focusing on “what’s in it for me” is a death knell for true love.

Yet, as mothers, we sometimes forget that in our relating to our adult children. When we can view them with some detachment, when our reactions to them are no longer based on expectations or being dependent on them, we are then able to love them fully and freely.

Do not look at your adult child as completing you, giving you a fulfilled life, or meeting your needs. When you set those aside, you begin to understand love.

What to Do Now?

If you are a hurting mama, laid low in the dust by the estrangement of an adult child, what should you do now?

  • Examine your feelings and thoughts. What does it feel like when attachment hurts? What thoughts are you thinking at the time? Can you begin to think differently?
  • Be with others and love them, but don’t look to them as your source of happiness.
  • Learn to be alone, not lonely. Loving ourselves enough that we can be our best companions is healthy.
  • Quit blaming yourself for the state of the relationship. You didn’t and couldn’t control the outcome. Why beat yourself up?

Read WHEN PEOPLE ASK ABOUT MY ESTRANGED CHILDREN… WHAT CAN I SAY?

Here are a few more ideas to help you heal and let go.

  • Journal – Writing or sketching your feelings and thoughts puts you in the moment and helps to get you out of your thoughts. Buy yourself a pretty journal and write in it whenever you feel overwhelmed, sad, or lonely.
  • Find other mothers in the same boat – Join Facebook groups and share your stories with other women who are going through the same thing. Lift each other up and remember not to fall into the trap of wallowing and continuous negativity. 
  • Seek counseling or therapy – Look into talk therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy. Online websites like Better Help and Talk Space offer versatile and affordable access to therapists and counselors.
  • Read empowering books such as:

Self-Love Workbook for Women: Release Self-Doubt, Build Self-Compassion, and Embrace Who You Are by Megan Logan on Amazon.

When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema Chödron on Amazon

Keep Moving by Maggie Smith on Amazon

The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz on Amazon

Mind Over Mood by Dennis Greenberger and Christine A. Padesky on Amazon.

When we are not attached to any outcome in our relationships, then we can be free and happy. When the state of our internal life is more important than our external circumstances – there lies peace.

Read PARENTING ADULT CHILDREN CAN BE AGONY.

Also, MY ADULT CHILDREN CUT ME OUT OF THEIR LIFE.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Do you still find it hard to let go of your adult children? Or, do you still worry about them and take care of them more than you think you should? Please join the conversation below.

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Jeremy

I want my mom to no longer be talking to me to permanently stop talking to me and no longer come in the basement invade my privacy. Stop making me things to eat.

Amy

Kinda late to the party, but here goes. I have an 18yo daughter, well step daughter but I’ve raised her since she was 8. She didn’t have a relationship with her bio mom and I filled that void. For 10 years she was the center of every single thing I did. She started acting out, sneaking in and out of the house and bringing other people in through her window and over all just changed. She decided that she was moving out on her birthday, which was yesterday. But she got into a fight with her dad and he told her to leave, that was last Thursday, so a week ago today. Yesterday she went with a “friend” to celebrate her birthday! Yay! Good for you! But she turned her phone off and it sparked animosity. She finally turned her phone back on, yet refuses to call her grandmother or dad back. I’m absolutely crushed. I see myself in every part of this article. My identity was her mom. And now she is gone to live her life. I’m over here drowning in tears and my heart physically aches. I have recently started going out with friends who I work with and I love going with them. I have lost weight and changed hair styles and color. I’ve started discovering me. But it still hurts. Does this pain go away? I actually feel a sense of calm after reading this. Now I know it’s normal and how to hopefully correct my own behavior to be more supportive of my adult daughter.

Evonne

Hobbies, find a hobby that you have always wanted to do. For me it was horses. I started showing horses at 49 years old and I am on a team. It is amazing and I keep so busy. I am responsible for my horse so something still needs me, and I have to care for it. There is dog showing, cat anything. You can meet people, have fun and honestly start having fun. It’s hard at first but I also do therapy. I have 3 children and it’s my 2 daughters that I have problems with, my son and I have a great relationship. But I also come from a very narcissistic family that I have had cut communication with that my daughters ran too. So it is complicated but I have grown so much thru all this and the friends I have, my husband and my horse are my saving grace. I actually had a melt down at my barn where I board my horse and but after crying on my horses neck, I stood up and said no I am strong and I am this is not my fault.
Evonne

Melody Willis

I have two children my son would be 36 he was killed when he was 28 and I have a daughter who is 28 and we used to be close! She has three kids that we always did everything together but now she is so busy that we never do anything together! I try to make plans to come see the grandkids and it never pans out. I just don’t want the grandkids to think I don’t care about them I try but my daughter is just busy doing her own things! A lot of it is about money I don’t have money to pay for everyone! I mention things that we can do and it never happens! I text my daughter she does answer me for a couple of hours! It just hurts

Missy

My daughter and i are the victims of parental alienation syndrome and nk she is 19 in the hospital and still.refuses to interact how broken i feel

The Author

Christine Field is an author, attorney, speaker, listener and life coach. She has four grown kids, mostly adopted, mostly homeschooled. She provides MomSolved© resources and reassurances to moms facing common and uncommon family life challenges. Christine helps moms rediscover their mojo for wholehearted living after parenting. Visit her website here http://www.realmomlife.com

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