Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Am I Right To Be Feeling This Way?
Ok this is delicate because I've never experienced it and need sensible answers.
My eldest daughter who is now 20 has been studying in UNI at London, and was soon to finish her courses, and the plan was or so I thought to come back to us in Cornwall soon.
But on her current Christmas visit, which I cherish as the past 3 years I've hardly seen her, she announced shes got a boyfriend who lives in London, actually Wimbledon.
Obviously I embraced her and said congratulations and that I am very happy for you both.
But as a Dad part of me thinks am I slowly losing my daughter rather than gaining her back to me.
Of course I am happy for her, and would never dream of standing in her way, but I feel I've patiently been waiting all this time to look forward to having her back in Cornwall, I'm now not so sure as she might use London as her permanent residence.
Am I being selfish? I can't help how I feel, obviously I want my siblings to be fairly near me, not so far that seeing her is only Christmas or birthdays.
I'm aware theres nothing I can do but is this normal to be so worried that I really am losing close contact with my daughter. I'm not getting any younger myself at 55. I was looking forward to her coming home 😭
Answers
ToraToraTora,
I get that, but I was trying to say the past 3 years have been painful not having her around other than term breaks.
I been constantly waiting for her courses to end so she can be back home.
I don't think this is now going to happen, and her life now will be forever away from me.
It sounds selfish, but whats wrong with a Dad wanting to have their siblings near them.
Especially as I have patiently been waiting for 3 years for her to come home.
Imagine my how my heart sank when she announced yesterday she has a serious boyfriend in London.
Obviously I am happy for her, but why does my heart say Im going to continue to miss her.
Besides the past 3 years, I don't think she video called me once. How will that improve?
I don't have kids but thought Id comment anyway.
I think its normal to feel as you do expecially if you were placing a lot of hope on her returning to your home.
However she is developing her own life and rather than focus on the sad parts maybe work on turning your feelings into a positive - you have raised an independent kid with a healthy desire to develop a life of her own.
Of course your need to see her is important too so maybe arrange regular catchups with her- lunch or coffee etc. Or to engage in a shared hobby together.
It sounds like you are somewhat still going through the enpty nest syndrome phase maybe have a read of this it has some coping stratagies on too
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Can I just add, its the distance the is hurting me.
Cornwall to London is at least 4 or 5 hours drive, plus I don't drive that far, never have, so it would mean a train journey.
But I do tend to think that would be a rare occurrence due to work restraints of my own, or expense.
I was looking forward to just popping round, regularly, not having to make it a big chunk of a weekend or something.
Not sure if I'm making sense.
This has been hard for my heart to bare, as I really was hinging my hopes for over 3 years that she would come back to me and stay local.
Sounds selfish doesn't it?
bednobs,
Thing is I let go when she went to Uni 3 years ago, and it hurt me then, I had loads of sleepless nights crying.
Its as if I have to adjust to not having her come home at all, or at least that's how I see it.
Obviously the guy shes met in London is well established there, hes dabbled in making movies, so I can't see them moving to Cornwall.
Its just not how I viewed having Children at all, that they would one day not be around.
I've always been around my own parents, and visited a few times in a week.
How can this happen with the distance of Cornwall to London?
Your job as a dad has been to train her to grow up to be an independent person, to be able to stand on her own feet and meet what the world throws at her - it sounds like you've succeeded. Have no fear, you'll always be her dad and she'll always be a Cornish girl at heart but, as you did all those years ago, she's found someone her own age that she wants to be with. She's not abandoning you, you just have to learn to share her. If you get too possessive you might lose her altogether.
Empty nesting is a tough time and often hits around your age. I did it to my parents and moved a fair distance away from home. My advice is to take the lead in keeping in touch. Go to London for a weekend in February. Book a holiday in Surrey or Sussex for May/June and ask your daughter to pencil the dates in her diary so that you can get together while you're there.
It will and can work, if you are prepared to work at it. Also time to think about how you can develop the next stage in your life as your children start theirs.
My daughter also made the move from home in Plymouth to university in London. She did her Masters, took a year off to move to Australia for a year with her BF for his job, came back and did her PhD in London.
Except for a few summers working in Plymouth, she's never been back to stay. I never expected her to.
Her experiences made her a strong and independent woman. She's career minded and until WFH became a thing, she'd not have found much work down here.
In the early days I took the bus or train to London as I dont drive...stayed in some grotty shared houses.(doubt her father made that effort!)That made me worry...then I remembered some places I lived in!
You've got to let your children fly free, it's part of the cycle of life. It will happen again with your younger children if you've prepared them for that growth, which you obviously have with your eldest. As for losing contact, if your relationship is good, you need not worry. But, you'll need to make an effort. If you've got WhatsApp, that's a free and cheap way to keep in touch.
I notice you said you've always been around your own parents...but that's not so much the way anymore. As a resident of Cornwall in particular, surely you know it's one of the poorest areas of the UK with little prospect for young people. It's economy is based on tourism and agriculture.