ARTICLES
Transitional Grief in the Empty Nest: What It Is and How to Cope
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven.” -Ecclesiastes 3:1
For most Christian moms, the wave of grief that follows launching a child is both unexpected and overwhelming, but it is completely normal. Overnight, the rhythm of daily life changes. The children who once filled the home with laughter, questions, and late-night snack raids are no longer near. Instead, longing creeps in. Moms find themselves wishing for just one more ordinary day of packing lunches, hearing the front door slam, or tripping over backpacks in the hallway.
The silence is deafening. Walking past a child’s empty bedroom can trigger a flood of tears, memories, and a painful awareness that life will never look quite the same. Moms who once felt confident in their role suddenly feel shaky, disoriented, and unsure of their purpose.
This tender ache has a name: transitional grief. It’s the emotional valley between what was and what is still becoming. The good news? It’s a season, not a life sentence. With honesty, healthy coping, and God’s grace, moms can move through this grief and discover new peace and purpose on the other side.
Now let’s unpack transitional grief: what it is, how to identify it, how to cope with it, and why trusting God makes all the difference.
Why Setting Boundaries Is One of the Best Gifts You Can Give Your Adult Child
Many Christian midlife moms silently wrestle with the idea of setting boundaries, especially when it comes to their adult children. We’ve been conditioned to believe that boundaries are harsh, unloving, or even a form of punishment for a child who’s struggling.
Church culture often reinforces the message that a godly woman should always sacrifice, always say yes, and always put her family first, no matter the cost. Over time, this well-meaning belief can lead to exhaustion, resentment, and relationships that feel anything but healthy.
But here’s the truth: the way you love your children needs to mature as they do.
When they were little, love looked like meeting their every need, late-night cuddles, scraped knees, and lunchboxes packed with care. But now that they’re adults, love looks different. It looks like wisdom, respect, and healthy boundaries.
As Christian counselor Leslie Vernick says, “Boundaries aren’t to push people away, but to create the space where love can grow safely.”
Setting boundaries isn’t selfish. It’s not unkind. It may be one of the greatest gifts we can offer our adult child, because boundaries pave the way for respect, growth, and lasting connection. Let’s look at six reasons why setting boundaries is a gift to our adult children.
6 Key Tips to Launching Your Child Well Into Adulthood
As summer fades and a new season approaches, many moms find themselves standing at the edge of one of the most emotional and transformative milestones of motherhood: launching a child into adulthood. Whether your son or daughter is heading to college, joining the military, starting a job, moving into their own place, or taking a gap year to explore the world, this season requires deep courage, wisdom, and a willingness to let go.
Every launch looks different, but one thing remains the same: your role as mom is shifting. And navigating that shift with grace doesn’t just happen; it takes intentionality. Here are six powerful tips to help you release well, support wisely, and stay grounded in your faith as your child steps into their future.
Letting Go of Control: How Christian Moms Can Trust God with Their Adult Kids
“When I am afraid, I will trust in You. “ -Psalm 56:3
Letting go of control and trusting God with our adult children can be one of the hardest things for moms, especially if we’ve spent years nurturing, guiding, and praying for them.
When we’re honest, no mom wants to raise her hand and admit, “Yeah, I’m a complete control freak when it comes to my kids.” We bristle and like to avoid reality, but at our core, many of us struggle with being in charge.
It showed up in our hovering, intervening, and desiring never to see our children struggle or fail. We continually rescued them from their poor choices or trials, and hoped it would improve.
Now that they’re grown, we struggle with worry and sleepless nights, wondering if they’re doing okay emotionally, relationally, spiritually, financially, and academically. We hope they pick the right mate, land the perfect job, and stroll through life unscathed.
In her book, It’s All Under Control, Jennifer Dukes Lee said, “You may need to let go of that deluded belief that if you worry about something enough, it will resolve itself.” Goodness, that one hits us in the gut, doesn’t it? Worry is delusion. Nothing good ever comes of worry except that we lose our peace. It doesn’t change anything for our adult child’s life. It simply makes us miserable.
We feel the pull to rescue, advise, and influence their choices, but we are called to trust God.
This season is a beautiful invitation into deeper faith.
From Pressure to Peace: 6 Ways Prayer Helps Christian Moms Stop People-Pleasing and Find Peace
“Obviously, I’m not trying to win the approval of people, but of God. If pleasing people were my goal, I would not be Christ’s servant.” -Galatians 1:10
People-pleasing feels like a trap that we can’t escape.
We lose ourselves in trying to make our grown kids happy. We become small. Resentment builds, and then our relationships feel tense. We wonder why we’re tired and discontent.
Prayer is the way we can step away from pleasing.
As we commune with God through everyday conversation of talking and listening for His voice, we are infused with His strength.
When we bow low, the Sovereign Lord is allowed to rule and reign in every situation. We exchange our weakness and are infused with power to act differently.
Our perspective shifts when we talk to God, and we desire to please Him more than our family. The Holy Spirit enables us to set boundaries and honor God with our surrendered hearts.
How People-Pleasing Hurts Your Relationship with Adult Child
No girl dreams of growing up as a people pleaser, but many do.
Christian women are taught to be helpful, serve, and support others. That’s great, but often, a mom gets lost in it all. She feels bitter, cheated, and inauthentic from trying to keep everyone in the family happy.
She put others’ needs before her own. This mom feels spread paper-thin and wonders why resentment constantly simmers under the surface.
There is a high cost of keeping the peace.
Let’s define it. People-pleasing is the desire to be agreeable, not create waves, and bring peace to our families. It seems innocent enough, but often, pleasing is driven by a sense of insecurity. It makes a mom feel needed and valued. She longs for her family’s approval, but she loses herself in the process.
People-pleasing can have a significant impact on moms with adult children, especially in the empty nest season. Here’s how it can play out and why it can be so draining:
Want to Be a Great Mother-In-Law? Stop Doing These 8 Things
Do you have a vision for the kind of mother-in-law you want to be?
It’s common to see mother-in-laws portrayed as controlling, easily offended, and judgmental. What a heartbreaking perspective. It doesn’t have to be that way.
As a Christian mother-in-law, your role is to be a loving, supportive presence, not a source of tension or control. This requires intentionality and grace towards yourself as you learn this new role.
Here are some key things NOT to do if you want to build a strong, God-honoring relationship with your child’s spouse:
1. Don’t Compete for Your Child’s Loyalty
You are not in competition with your child’s spouse. Once your child is married, their spouse becomes their priority. You are willing to step aside as your child clings to their mate. This is God’s good plan for marriage as laid out in Genesis 2:24, “Leave his father and mother and cling to his wife, and they will become one flesh.”
Secrets to Being a Mother-in-Law Who Loves Without Overstepping
"That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh"- Genesis 2:24
Navigating the changing dynamics of family life can be both beautiful and challenging. As your child enters a serious relationship and eventually chooses a spouse, your role as a mom shifts in meaningful ways. It’s a transition filled with opportunities to grow in love, grace, and wisdom.
You set the tone in your relationship with your daughter- or son-in-law from the beginning. Your words, actions, and heart posture toward them can either build a bridge of unity or create walls of distance. This new chapter requires intentionality and humility, but it also holds the potential for deep, lasting relationships that bless generations.
Let’s explore how you can be a positive, loving presence that strengthens your child’s marriage, honors God’s design for families, and ultimately brings you greater peace and joy.
You Set the Tone
You set the tone in your relationship with your daughter- or son-in-law. When your child gets serious about a relationship, you must guard how you respond to their potential mate. One critical or judgmental comment can produce wariness for your child’s future spouse.
Be mindful of your words. Therapist Heather Bjur recommends that you have one hundred percent positive regard for your child’s spouse. If you have a problem with something your child’s mate does, you take it up with God and continue to be a loving presence. You are not responsible for your child’s spouse's behavior, but you are responsible for yourself. Choose wisely, momma.
Four Key Questions to Find Purpose in the Empty Nest
"The Lord will work out his plans for my life—for your faithful love, O Lord, endures forever. Don’t abandon me, for you made me." Psalm 138:8
Longing for Days Past
Nancy headed to the grocery store, on a snowy morning, as her thoughts returned to her grown kids. “I loved those days when the kids were home. I schlepped them off to the store hoping no one would freak out in the checkout lane,” she giggled thinking about all the times someone had a meltdown.
“God had called me to stay home and care for them. I gave up my career because I wanted to. I was happy to answer the call of motherhood,” she thought.
A tear rolled down her cheek as she pondered, “But now they’re grown, what's next for me?”
“I loved being a mom. I didn’t think ahead too much to this season,” she sighed. “I wonder what God has for me now? I feel lost and purposeless. When will the ache go away?” she wondered.
Adrift
It’s not uncommon to feel like a rudderless ship once your kids leave the nest. We’re adrift and lost, wondering when we'll land in port.
We had our feet firmly planted in motherhood. We knew what was expected and even when we floundered, with challenges, we were confident in our roles as moms. We were secure and settled.
Now we face doubts and questions:
Where do we start to understand our purpose?
How can we know what God has for us in this season?
How do we find our actual purpose?
How do we reinvent ourselves?
Will we ever feel confident and self-assured again?
7 Ways to Pray for Your Adult Children
“Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you will receive it and it will be yours.”-Mark 11:24
If you don’t pray for your adult child, who will?
These words were whispered to my heart, by the Holy Spirit, one morning as I sat with God. The velocity of the truth ripped through my soul. It got me wondering about who was actually praying for my children. Perhaps my married children’s spouse’s did. Perhaps close friends. Maybe friends from their small group. Certainly my husband prayed for them and their grandma interceded on their behalf. Probably my son and daughter in law's parents prayed for our kids.
What about my grown children who weren’t walking with God? Who’s praying for them?
The Spiritual Folks
We want the more spiritual folks to do the praying: the pastors, pastor’s wives, spiritual leaders, and missionaries.They know exactly what to pray and how to pray it. We feel more comfortable agreeing with their prayers. We want to believe our children are supported through prayer, but in reality, the list is probably quite short.
If I’m one of the few people praying for my grown children, how does that impact my prayer life? It got me wondering:
Could prayer be my first response instead of my last resort?
What if I stepped away from formal prayers and just talked to God about what was going on in my grownup kid’s lives?
What if I released control and surrendered it all to God?
What would it look like if I exchanged my worries for confidence in God?
What if I replaced doubt with faith?
What if I allowed a mustard seed of faith to grow concerning my offspring?
What if prayer were the antidote to distress?
Finding Peace in the Empty Nest: The Power of Relying on God
“My soul clings to You; Your right hand upholds me.”- Psalm 63:8
Assurance from God
Julie stood at the kitchen window as the morning sunrise revealed it’s glory of oranges, pinks, and purples. She breathed in the beauty and offered quiet praise to God. “Thank you Lord, for your presence. Thank you for being with me today. How I need you so. Please be with me in all I do. Amen,” she whispered in her heart.
Her formerly bustling house was reduced to crickets now that the kids were gone. Each morning at the sink was the reminder she needed that God wasn’t done yet. There were good things ahead for her in her empty nest.
Are you needing reassurance in your empty nest?
God is ready to help you find peace.
When our children grow up, there is a natural transition in our relationship with them. We loosen control as our kids venture into the world. It starts in their teens as we let them have a little independence. We monitor their activity then see how they do. If they respond well to freedom, we give them more. If not, we reign them in until they can prove themselves trustworthy.
This continues through college, as we release them to live separately from us. We no longer have control over their day to day, or their political, religious, or cultural views. But we have guardrails around them, as they return home each summer and still rely on us financially.
There comes a point where they become truly adult: they have their own jobs, homes, perhaps a spouse and children and responsibility for their finances, social circles, and beliefs. We still influence them from afar, but they are solely responsible for running their own lives.
In the empty nest, our identity is no longer tied to our motherhood or whether our kids thrive or not in adulthood. That’s not on us. Our grown children are responsible for their own success.
Cling to God
Instead of holding on to our kids, we are invited to cling to God.
“My soul clings to You; Your right hand upholds me.”- Psalm 63:8
How to Support Your Struggling Adult Child
“The name of the Lord is a fortified tower; the righteous run to it and are safe.”- Proverbs 18:10
Amy’s Struggle
Julie felt the weight of her grown daughter’s struggles. Tension pressed across her forehead as she rehashed yesterday's conversation with Amy. Amy had landed a job shortly after college, but then sunk into a depression after her long term boyfriend called it quits. Heartbroken and sad, Amy checked out. She no longer cared for herself, and called in “sick” to work, often.
As a way to support her daughter, Julie agreed to a nightly check in phone call. At first Julie felt relieved to hear from her daughter, but as time progressed, so did Amy’s complaining. Amy was spiraling into bitterness and hopelessness.
Julie woke one morning after another fitful night of sleep and prayed, “God, I cannot do this anymore. Amy is exhausting me. Please give me wisdom to support Amy without taking on her emotional load. Give me courage to set some boundaries with Amy because I’m losing myself in the pain. Amen.”
How About You?
Have you ever faced sleepless nights and days of worried thoughts because your grown child isn’t thriving?
Top Ten Things Moms Should Know Before Launching Their Kids
Are you ready for it?
Hey there, momma!
So, picture this: your kiddo is on the verge of spreading their wings and taking on the big, wide world. Exciting, right? But, let's be real, it's also a bit nerve-wracking. As Christian moms, we know there's more to this launch than just packing bags and giving pep talks. It's about trusting God and preparing yourself for the biggest shift in your motherhood. So, before we send our little ones off into the unknown, let's chat about the top ten things moms need to know before launching their kids.
1. Allow your child to be autonomous:
No grown child wants you to be a hovering, helicopter mom. That’s just annoying! It’s normal when your child wants his independence and control over his own decision. This is the goal of parenting. They want to become their own person and you need to let them become just that. You gotta get out of the way. Even if it means them moving away or heading in a direction you wouldn’t select. You must let them fly.
The Big Question: What are you doing to encourage your child to make choices for his life?
2. Don’t make this season about you:
This transition is not about you; it’s about your emerging adult and what is best for him. There will be time for you to process transitional grief, but don’t do that with your child. That will hurt him. Instead, Brenda Yoder, author of Fledge said, “Be the kind of mom you needed when you young. This will ensure your child feels loved and supported. This is important! It’s what they need most! You’ll have time to handle your emotions alone, with God.
The Big Question: What can you do to remember this is about your child not you?
Embracing the Bittersweet with High School Seniors
“Don’t worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need, and thank him for all he has done. Then you will experience God’s peace, which exceeds anything we can understand. His peace will guard your hearts and minds as you live in Christ Jesus.” - Philippians 4:6-7
Bittersweet Moments
I watched Rebekah gracefully cross the stage to accept her certificate, confident and composed, as my mind flashed to her four-year-old-self. I saw her in her purple sequined tutu and her first pair of tap shoes, blissfully on stage at her first dance recital. Her wavy hair was piled on top of her head in a messy bun, with a purple feather hat tipped to the side. She grinned from ear to ear as the music faded up. Her brown eyes sparkled as she danced.
I remembered the challenging middle school years where girls hurled insults and hurt her tender heart. “Mean Girls” wasn’t just a movie, it was a shocking reality for my young teen. She navigated rejection and learned important lessons about friendship.
High school brought endless leadership opportunities and growth. And here we were at the end, as our calendar was filled with events.The final Choir Concert, Spring Musical, National Honor Society Banquet, Prom, Student Council Banquet, Speech Banquet. She happily walked through each event while I thought my heart would break in two.
How would I survive bittersweet moments, tumbling together, one after another? Is this what letting go feels like?
Emotional Swings
Maybe you’ve felt these emotional swoops as high school graduation season is upon us.
Moms will experience immense contradictory emotions as they navigate the end of their children's high school. Know this is normal. This is part of the transition. This is where we feel unsettled and at peace. How is this even possible? You’re not losing your mind; you're just moving through a big moment in your motherhood.
We live in the tension of “big feelings" and confidence in God. We’ll experience abundant joy and deep sorrow. We are stuck longing for the past, but hopeful for the future. We’ll experience regret for our mistakes and pride for the ways we parented well. We will wrestle with doubt and cling to God
Decoding Parental Estrangement: Understanding the Root Causes
I’m Done with You!
Jessica struggled with her daughter Lisa for years. Tensions ran high daily. There were endless misunderstandings and miscommunications. They clashed on everything from clothing styles, grades, and her friends. Lisa felt she never pleased her mom. She felt picked on and had a deep sense of resentment.
Jessica pushed hard with extreme discipline, and Lisa pulled farther away. There was no pleasing her mother. When high school rolled around, Lisa just stayed away more. This infuriated her mom.
College came and Lisa was thrilled to live hours away from her mother’s control. She loved the freedom and didn’t miss the hassle. She felt liberated. Every time her mom called or texted, she ignored her phone. Lisa relished the freedom and the opportunity to believe what she wanted without her mother’s influence over her anymore.
One day she texted her mom, “Please don’t reach out to me anymore. I’m done with you. Respect my wishes.” Jessica was understandably devastated. The following weeks Jessica felt hopeless, heart sick, and exhausted. “How could this have happened to me?” She wondered.
What is Parental Estrangement?
Parental estrangement is one of the most devastating issues for moms to face in recent years. Thousands of families are left heartbroken and bewildered. Today I’ll attempt to give a broad overview of a complex topic.
First off, let’s define parental estrangement. According to Wikipedia, “It is the loss of a previously existing relationship between family members through physical and/or emotional distancing often to the extent that there is negligible or no communication between the individuals for a prolonged period.”
Revitalize Your Empty Nest Marriage: Remove Contempt to Embrace Respect
“Show proper respect to everyone.” - 1 Peter 2:17
Discontent Rumbles
This low-level discontent rumbled in my heart for months. I was 26 years into our marriage, and I felt dissatisfied. Our nest started to empty but our busy ministry schedule, children’s activities, and obligations kept us running hard.
Maybe I was tired. Maybe I was frustrated with the ministry, nevertheless, I took it out on my husband.
He couldn’t do anything right, in my estimation. I’d mumbled under my breath and had critical, negative thoughts towards him. Oh, I didn’t act like anything was wrong. No sir! I kept up the charade!
Even coworkers at the church office noticed how we snipped at each other. Pastor Adam, our worship leader, called us on it one day. “You guys sure bicker a lot!” he said. “We do?” I thought, slightly irritated and convicted by his comment.
Here’s the deal, my husband knew nothing about my simmering contempt because I didn’t tell him. The problem wasn’t his behavior'; it was the condition of my heart. I allowed myself to be embittered and filled with contempt for his slightest missteps. I magnified his mistakes while I was puffed up with pride for what a great wife I was.
Goodness! What a recipe for disaster. I’m grateful the Lord met with me through prayer as He dealt with my pride. After reading Gary Thomas’, Sacred Marriage, I knew I needed to handle my heart (a.k.a. my sin).
As Gary Thomas recommended, I made a list of all my husband's admirable qualities: personality traits, physical attributes, and character qualities. It wasn’t hard to come up with a beautiful, long list. My heart swelled as I continued to add to the list. Then I made another list: all the ways I fell short. I listed my sins and they were many.
I was disgusted with myself, but I did not feel condemned. Tears rolled down my cheeks as I realized my shortcomings. God ministered to me, those weeks, as I prayed over these lists. My admiration for my husband grew and my understanding of all the ways I fell short had a lasting impact. I dealt with my pride before God and He was most tender with me. The contempt and discontent faded away.
Embracing Now: Nurturing Peace for Worrier Moms
Runaway Thoughts
As I loaded the dishwasher, worry clung to me like a staticky silk skirt. Soon Rebekah would drive seven hours from Evangel University, in Springfield, Missouri, to our home in Iowa. “Was it even a good idea for a single young woman to travel across the country alone?”, I wondered. My imagination ran wild as I envisioned car trouble, or worse, an attack at a gas station, or a horrific car accident. I’d be so far away, it would take forever for me to get to her.
Anxiety mounted in my chest. Every scenario I played out in my mind had a deadly ending. I shook my head back to the present, astonished how far I had let my imagination wander. Shame enveloped me. It was ridiculous and so unbecoming of the woman of God I was. Why did I have such a small view of God in those moments? Why had I let worry run free in my mind?
Worry and Fear
We get lost in worry for the future, don’t we momma? Peace is swept away as anxiety grows in our hearts and minds. What’s a momma to do?
There are two things that keep us from the present with our adult children: worry and fear. Oh, how easy it is for moms to jump ahead and fear the unknown future. These negative forces take root in our thoughts as we predict events that haven’t even happened. We’re consumed with “what ifs.” We are robbed of our peace and joy.
Julie LeFebure, author of, Right Now Matters, said, “The future becomes a distraction when we allow fear and worry to fill it.” Do we realize our worry is a distraction? The enemy designed it so it would make us take our eyes off God. We get focused in unseen places and we completely miss God.
From Nostalgic to Now: Empowering Moms to Embrace the Present
“Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old. Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?” - Isaiah 43:18-19
Shuffling Down Memory Lane
Angela sat crossed-legged on the wood floor surrounded by tattered photo albums of her kids. How many times had she returned to them to reminisce? “Who even uses photo albums anymore?” she wondered.
Memories flooded her mind as she recalled tender, silly moments with her growing children. It was so much easier then. She knew exactly what to do. Even when she questioned her mothering skills, she knew how to find answers. Her local MOPS group was filled with friends and squirrely kids. Moms traded parenting tips like their kids exchanged Pokemon cards. They prayed together and clung to each other. There was so much support. They scoured Parenting magazine and listened to Dr. Dobson's, Focus on the Family. The answers to parenting questions were plentiful back then.
There was a rhythm to life that revolved around feeding, bathing, playing, and bedtime routines with her children. Every season she’d sort through their clothing and assess what new items they needed. Hand Me Downs and garage sale finds were traded between kids.
Her biggest problems were endless laundry, bickering kids, defiant toddlers, and the need to cook another meal for her hungry crew. Oh, how she wished she could go back in time where she felt assured of her role in this world. Her children adored her, even if they did have moments of tension, she knew how to make it better.
Right Now
Now that her children are grown, life feels more complicated. The stakes are higher. There are bigger obstacles, and she’s supposed to “let go.” How can she honor the past, but not get stuck there?
Pitfalls of Living in the Past
It’s normal for moms with adult children to get stuck in the past. Nostalgia overwhelms us and we don’t always accept the grownup child in front of us. Truth be told, we’d rather go back to simpler days. Nostalgia has its place. It’s okay to reminisce, as long as we don’t get stuck in some idealized version of the past.