My Empty Nest List
I distinctly remember crying when my firstborn was only four days old, because our time together was ticking by so fast. And sure enough, it seems like I barely blinked before he was grown and gone, with a wife and four sons of his own.
Although I still had eleven little chicks in my nest when that first one fledged and flew away, I realized with a wince that, one by one, his siblings would soon follow. Two more are perched at the edge even now and will have flown off for good by late spring.
It's a bittersweet time for mama bird. I'm proud and excited to see them go, so full of promise and potential, yet I'm painfully aware that our home will never be the same without them.
It's hard to let go, and I don't anticipate the process getting any easier. So several years ago, I began to compile what I call my empty nest list.
Some of the items on the list are things I enjoyed in earlier seasons of my life and would like to revisit:
backpacking Europe
singing with the symphony
teaching calculus
painting porcelain
Some activities are things I've never tried but am intrigued by:
glass blowing
salsa dancing
mountain climbing
scuba diving
Some are opportunities to minister in ways that my current responsibilities don't allow:
rocking babies in Russian orphanages
counseling women through Crisis Pregnancy Centers
feeding the hungry in Third World countries
accompanying my husband on medical mission trips
Some entail expanding my skills in current areas of interest:
writing and publishing prolifically
memorizing large portions of scripture
learning to play a few beloved classics on the piano
becoming fluent in Spanish, German, French, and Chinese
Some involve traveling to places I've never been before:
Beijing
Costa Rico
Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania
The Moon
My original list is impossibly long, with more on it than one could hope to squeeze into a single lifetime. Some of the ideas may lose their charm long before I have time to devote to them, but that is okay. It was never meant to be a bucket list of exploits to check off before I die.
Rather, it was intended to serve as a reminder that life doesn't stop when your last child leaves the nest. All sorts of new and exciting possibilities await, even after this precious, fleeting season of child-rearing comes to its inevitable end.
In the wise words of Dr. Seuss, we "don't cry because it's over, [we] smile because it happened."
And then we do the next thing. What will yours be?







