adoption

How We Embraced Our Empty Nest

More than a decade ago, Domino's Pizza called, wondering if we were okay — it had been weeks since we ordered pizza. Dave assured them that all was fine. Actually we were overdosing on lima beans, broccoli and brussels sprouts. Why the change in menu?

Several weeks earlier, we had dropped off our youngest child, Jonathan, at Wheaton College. Now we could eat what we wanted, when we wanted. Our time belonged to us. No longer was Claudia the family air-traffic controller. No more junior tennis tournaments or soccer practices. No more impromptu teenage parties. Our house was ours again, including the kitchen and the menu.

Please don't misunderstand us. We love our three sons and enjoyed raising them — well, most of the time — yet our initial reaction to our empty nest was relief. Parenting three boys wasn't easy, but with God's grace, a sense of humor, a few good parenting principles, and more than 20 years of forced labor, we made it.

Now it was our turn to enjoy life! But making the transition to the empty nest wasn't the breeze it first appeared to be. Instead, it was more of a hurricane's gale-force wind. After bingeing on vegetables, we struggled to eat regular meals. Without kids around, we found ourselves working until 9 or 10 at night and forgetting about dinner. Our late-night boxed-cereal buffets were becoming a tradition.

Changing responsibilities also confused the landscape. Claudia had been more involved with our children and running the home than Dave had been. Now was her time to do what she wanted to do with her life — but what was that? Claudia enjoyed writing and the times we had traveled and spoken together. Suddenly she realized that all the things she had delayed until the kids left home were possibilities. Soon we accepted writing projects, speaking engagements and seminars — too many of them — which left us with little time and energy for each other.

Sitting at our breakfast table one morning, we agreed something had to give. We needed help; we needed to regroup, to refocus and refresh our own relationship. We decided to research this passage into the empty nest and beyond. That day we began what has become a 10-year journey.

Surveying the second half

We conducted a national survey of long-term marriages and received more than 1,000 written responses. We interviewed couples in all kinds of marriages — from the healthy, loving and vibrant to the distressed, hurting and lonely, and those in between. And one of the most encouraging discoveries we made is that for couples who make it through the empty-nest transition, marital satisfaction rises if they keep working on their relationship. For those who don't take the risk to grow together, their marital bond slowly weakens over the years.

In our book The Second Half of Marriage (1996, Zondervan), we listed eight empty-nest challenges. We are convinced if you work through them, your marriage will be enriched.

Background Information

Agency Adoptions
When it is time to evaluate adoption agencies, consider these pros and cons.

Where Have All the Babies Gone?
The top reasons fewer babies are available to the growing number of couples who want to adopt.

Adopting on Your Own
This advice can help single parents who want to adopt children.

Causes and Characteristics of Attachment Disorder
For adoptive parents, attachment issues can be a huge concern.

Independent Adoption
These are the risks and rewards of adopting without the help of an agency.

Questions and Answers

Are adopted children more likely to be rebellious than children raised by biological parents?
Answer

How would you go about telling a child he or she is adopted, and when should that disclosure occur?
Answer

Review Frequently Asked Questions

Stories

Reflections on Bonding With an Adopted Child
Bonding with an adopted child can take time — and great patience.

A Second Chance at Life
Two adopted children arrived from the most unlikely of sources.

Adoption as Grace
How does enlarging your family reflect God's love?

An Act of Grace
In the midst of ethical ambiguity, one infertility treatment is a welcome development.

Climbing the Hills
A father tells his story of adopting his daughter from Russia.

If you've been through a experience related to this topic, we invite you to share your story with others.
Share Your Story

Other Things to Consider

Where is God in the Midst of All My Troubles?
So many cry out to Him in times of need, but is God really listening? And, more important, does He care?

Life PressuresWorking Moms, Stay-at-Home Moms

RelationshipsBlended Families, Divorce, Parents and Adult Children, Caring for Elderly Parents