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At 65, We Realized Our Kids Don’t Need Us Anymore – How Do We Embrace This New Chapter and Start Living for Ourselves?

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At sixty-five, it dawned on usour children had moved on, leaving us behind. For the first time, I wondered: had we poured our lives into them only to be forgotten? The three we raised, spoilt with time and love, had taken all and vanished. My son barely answers my calls. Some nights, I dreamwill any of them even fetch me a cup of tea when Im frail?

I married at twenty-five. William had been my schoolmate, trailing me like a shadow. He even followed me to university. A year after our simple wedding, I fell pregnant, and our first daughter arrived. William left his studies to work, while I took time away from mine.

Those were lean years. My husband toiled endlessly; I juggled motherhood and exams. Two years later, another child came. I switched to evening lectures, and William worked double shifts. Still, we raised twoour eldest, Eleanor, and our boy, Thomas. When Eleanor started school, I finally found work in my field. Life softened: William had a steady job, and we built our home. Then, like a twist of fate, I was pregnant again.

Our third, little Matilda, brought fresh struggles. William laboured harder; I stayed home with her. Somehow, we scraped by. When Matilda began primary school, I breathed again.

But life had more in store. Eleanor, barely at university, declared she was marrying. We didnt objectwed wed young too. The wedding and her flat drained our savings.

Thomas wanted his own place. We couldnt refuse, so we took another mortgage. Luck favoured himhe landed a job at a top firm.

Then Matilda, in her final A-level year, announced her dream: studying in America. We scrimped, sold bits, and sent her off. She never came back.

Now, they visit less. Eleanor, though nearby, seldom calls. Thomas moved to London and barely remembers us. Matilda stayed abroad.

We gave them everythingour years, our pennies, our hearts. Now were ghosts in their lives. We dont want their moneyjust a word, a visit, a scrap of kindness.

But perhaps thats done. Maybe, at sixty-five, its time to stop waiting. To live for ourselves, at last. Havent we earned that much? A sliver of happiness, long deferred?

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