When your heart hurts over an adult child
Let’s unclench our fists, raise our open hands, and release our adult children to Him — our Abba Father, Healer, Rescuer, the One who takes this often topsy-turvy world and makes sense of it. Take heart.
Inspired? Create and share by tagging @DaySpringCards.
She chased me down in the empty church hallway. Her voice wobbled as she began to speak and a shift in her cadence alerted me that this was a conversation where I needed to stop hustling to the sanctuary. The worship service could wait.
“Jen, thank you for reminding me that we aren’t the only parents struggling in this season.” Her tears started falling. “I never envisioned this stage of mothering—parenting adult children—could be so lonely or that I’d ever be disconnected from one of my children. I’ve asked myself again and again, ‘Did we do something wrong? What can we do differently?’ Mothering guilt is so very painful and I’ve lost so much sleep over his choices.”
For the next thirty minutes, she bared her tender, mothering soul. We carved a connection that only comes when two people cast off appearances, acknowledge shared struggles, and hold each other’s cares with great compassion. I’ve learned when we enter delicate discussions with a quiet and humble heart, then tender conversations can heal instead of hurt.
She felt comfortable approaching me because a few weeks earlier I facilitated our Sunday School discussion on parenting adult children. The first week, our class hosted a panel of younger adults spanning ages from twenty-four to thirty-nine. We encouraged them to speak freely so we could better understand the generation we are parenting. They answered a plethora of dicey questions ranging from, “Why do so many young people who were raised in the Church turn away from the Lord?” to “As parents, we have blind spots, so discuss your best advice that we need to know.” (Their answers were so good! Treat them like adults because they are adults. Less lecture, listen more. Allow mistakes without micromanaging, and more valuable insights.)
The following week we continued the discussion among our peers and I started with the reassurance we often need in parenting—we are not alone in this journey. Yet our parenting stories are so personal. When our hearts splay open as our adult children make lifelong choices that we don’t have the freedom to share, we carry the burden in isolation. It’s understandable to feel a deep ache, but this is when we need each other most. We need mothering mentors to normalize this discussion.
As mommas, we spend over eighteen years comforting our kids and carrying their burdens, nurturing and negotiating their future, naming their pain alongside years of loving, and listening to and learning their hopes and dreams. We lean in and become professors of their personalities, and when we finally launch them to be their very best selves, we pray their biblical foundation propels them to the goodness and glory of the Lord. Yet for many in our Sunday school class, and I’m guessing for many of you too, we’re met with their faith resistance.
There’s a new tension in our hearts. We believe we know what’s best for them, right? (And oftentimes we do!) But while they’ll always be our babies, they’ve left our parental guardianship and are now accountable to the Lord. It’s time to listen more and lean into who they’ve become. It’s an ongoing season of releasing control and managing expectations. It’s a season of surrounding our adult kids in prayer and turning any worries, wonderings, and ‘what ifs’ about their future, their safety, and their choices to the One who knows and loves them best.
Using Colossians 1:9-12 ESV as a model, Paul’s prayer for the church of Colossae is my heartbeat for our five adult kids. I personalize it with their name and pray specifics from this passage to their lives:
And so, from the day we heard, have not ceased to pray for you, asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him: bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; being strengthened with all power, according to his glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy; giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in light.
Mommas, take a deep cleansing breath with me. Let’s unclench our fists, raise our open hands, and release our adult children to Him — our Abba Father, Healer, Rescuer, the One who takes this often topsy-turvy world and makes sense of it. Take heart. He can and will do it!
My prayer is that all of us will be able to proclaim, “I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth” (3 John 1:4 ESV).
What a day of rejoicing that will be.
You may also like
See more-
DaySpring 5 things to know when you open the door to an empty (or emptier) nest
God promises us a wonderful future. Eventually, the changing nest will feel less new and more familiar. There is much...
-
DaySpring Patient endurance is what you need now
When we face circumstances that don’t make any earthly sense, God doesn’t want us to ask how. He wants us to say, “I ...
-
DaySpring Don’t let old jeans make you keep looking back
Friend, God is not done with you. He isn’t disappointed that your gifts and talents look different today than they di...
-
DaySpring When your wisdom is showing
Haven’t you found that the older you get, the better you understand the brevity of life and the value of today? Tomor...
-
DaySpring For the empty chair at your table
Sometimes. . .we just need someone to acknowledge that the ache is real. Sometimes we just need to hear that while ho...
-
DaySpring I have seen the Lord
You don’t lose someone and then move on with the healing in a linear way. Rather, it resurfaces over and over, and yo...
-
DaySpring When you’re tired of being second choice
If you’re feeling like you’ll never be anyone’s first choice, take heart. You are someone’s first choice. You’re the ...
-
DaySpring The unexpected miracle
No matter how impossible your situation may seem, this moment, right now, is your opportunity to seek refuge in your ...
-
DaySpring Your reminder that Jesus is already in the boat
How often do our texts, emails, and DMs pile up like a heap of prayer requests? Some days I want to step outside and ...
-
DaySpring Weakness is spelled s-t-r-e-n-g-t-h
People are looking to others to find safety in sharing their own pain. My weakness, to some people, is the shortcut t...
-
DaySpring Fully loved and always invited by God
Jesus is our refuge and safe place, where we are fully known and fully loved. He is our anchor and firm foundation, a...
-
DaySpring For when you find yourself asking God how much longer
God was there then and He’s here now, with us in every waiting room, working for our good and His glory. Remembering ...
-
DaySpring Stay a little longer
In our very next breath, before the inhale, between, and after the exhale, He is here. The great I Am creating space ...
-
DaySpring Sometimes barely is enough
Here’s the good news: Prayers don’t need to be shouted in order for God to hear them. Sometimes, even your barely-eno...
-
DaySpring When you don’t think you can keep going, take the next step
Some of you are tempted to give up right about now. You are bone-weary and frustrated. You are staring up another uph...
-
DaySpring Your time has not passed
Here’s the good news, friend: there’s no such thing as being too old to make a difference. God’s plans and purposes f...
-
DaySpring Simple surrender prayers for when you need to get out of your own way
Is there a problem or person that you need to surrender to God? It’s hard to admit that you are powerless, but it’s e...
-
DaySpring A prayer for overwhelmed mothers
Let's pray, asking God to intervene during the overwhelming moments of motherhood so that we can be the moms He creat...
-
DaySpring 5 easy ways to live your faith
Nothing extraordinary, and yet these five simple ways to live your faith could just change everything!
-
DaySpring A prayer for my best friends
Let’s say a prayer for our best friends - the ones we allow to come a little closer to our hearts than others, the on...