There are moments in a parent’s life when emotion refuses to stay neat and categorised.
This past month has been one of them.
Both our children have boarded — or are boarding — planes for overseas careers. Not gap-year adventures, but real, adult steps into their own futures. And as we watch them go, I realise just how unprepared I am for what it feels like when the door closes behind them and the house falls quiet.
Empty nesting is a strange paradox — a sweet victory wrapped in a bitter ache.
The Bitter
The bitterness is not about regret alone.
It’s about finality.
For the first time in 23 years, Christmas will be just the two of us.
No excited voices.
No last-minute gift-wrapping chaos.
No noise.
The worldly, family-centred rhythm of Christmas — which, for us, has mostly orbited around our kids — will sound very different this year.
There’s also the deep vulnerability of letting go.
They are far away.
We cannot step in if things go wrong.
We cannot cushion the fall or read their fatigue or see the worry in their eyes.
All we can do is entrust them to God — something we’ve always done, but which suddenly feels more real than ever. In past years my mind could pretend to “wrestle the steering wheel back.”
Now? I simply can’t.
I will be a distant observer, not an active fixer.
That truth stings.
And there’s guilt — the quiet kind that surfaces when a chapter closes.
The things I didn’t get right.
The moments I’d love to redo.
The habits I wish I’d modelled better.
And the ways I hope they will choose differently when they one day raise their own children.
The Sweet
But there is sweetness too — an unmistakable one.
This is exactly what we prayed for: that our children would grow into independent, courageous adults who follow their dreams wherever those dreams take them. That they would not be held back by fear or smallness. That they would take up space in the world as whole, capable, resilient young people.
And here they are… doing exactly that.
They are standing on their own feet.
They are navigating foreign cities.
They are making choices, building networks, shaping careers.
Everything we’ve poured into them — every value, every conversation, every boundary, every prayer — is now being tested not in theory, but in life.
It is beautiful.
And it is hard.
But beauty and difficulty often travel together.
The Space Between Who We Were and Who We Are Becoming
In recent years I spoke with excitement about “getting my wife back” when the kids eventually left home. I imagined renewed spontaneity, rediscovered simplicity, long dinners without interruption.
But now that the moment has arrived, a different feeling surfaced:
Part of me wished this cup could pass from us.
Not because I don’t want the next chapter — I do.
But because closure hurts, even when it’s right.
This transition is not about lamentation.
It’s about truthfully honouring what is ending and what is beginning — death and birth sitting at the same table, not as foes but as companions.
A New Chapter of Fatherhood
My role as a father is changing.
I will no longer stand next to them physically.
I will stand with them in thought, in prayer, in spirit.
Fatherhood, I am discovering, has chapters I never imagined — chapters where proximity is replaced by trust, where presence is mostly digital, and where guidance becomes invitation rather than instruction.
I don’t know exactly what fathering adults looks like, but I’m willing to learn.
I’m open to begin this new chapter of the book.
And I believe — deeply — that they will be just fine.
Their Transition Too
And of course, our children are also walking through their own transition.
They now face the full weight and wonder of independence — the reality on the other side of all those childhood hopes and prayers. Their experiences will not look the same as mine or even each other’s; each is meeting this chapter with their own blend of excitement, uncertainty, responsibility, and possibility.
As their father, all I can do is support them in the ways they need, hold the differences in their journeys with gentleness, and trust that the foundations we’ve laid will serve them well in the weeks, months, and years ahead.
A New Chapter of Marriage
Our home is quieter now, more spacious in ways that feel both liberating and unsettling.
It’s just us —
not in the sense of loss, but in the sense of rediscovery.
This is an invitation to learn each other again.
To rebuild rhythms.
To explore who we are when parenting is no longer the organising centre of our lives.
It is daunting… and exciting.
And while this is my experience of empty nesting, I know it is not the same as my wife’s.
Her transition — though shaped by the same circumstance — carries its own emotions, its own texture, its own story. I don’t want to speak for her, nor assume our paths through this chapter will look identical.
All I want is to be present with her in it…
to support her as she navigates her own letting go, her own grief, and her own beginning.
We are in the same moment, but we are experiencing it differently — and that, too, feels sacred.
The Page That Turns and the Page That Waits
Yes — this is emotional.
Yes — there are tears.
My heart aches and leaps with joy at the same time.
But perhaps that’s the point:
When one chapter closes with such intensity, the next one rarely begins quietly.
There is gratitude woven into the grief.
There is anticipation tucked inside the sadness.
There is a blank page waiting, and I am learning to step toward it with openness rather than fear.
Empty nesting is not an ending — it’s a re-orientation.
A new chapter.
A remembering of who we are when our roles evolve.
And maybe that’s what makes it holy.
