When our children are young, motherhood comes with a certain kind of clarity.
There are lunches to pack, rides to give, problems to solve, homework to help with, and a thousand little ways we know where we're needed. We may not always feel confident, but most of the time we know what our job is.
Then our children grow up.
And at some point, often without anyone warning us, the relationship starts asking something different of us.
We still love them just as deeply. We still care just as much. But the way we express that love often has to change.
The hard part is that nobody really teaches mothers how to make that transition.
One day you realize the role you've known for years doesn't fit quite the same way anymore. Yet there's no roadmap for what comes next. You're left trying to figure out when to offer help, when to hold back, what to say, what to keep to yourself, and how to stay connected while also making room for your own life.
It's an uncomfortable place to be because you're standing between two versions of the relationship. The old one no longer fits, and the new one is still taking shape.
Many mothers assume that uncertainty means they're doing something wrong.
I don't think that's true.
I think it's often what growth looks like. Two people learning how to relate to each other in a completely new season of life.
If this resonates, it's exactly the kind of thing I write about in Moments for Moms. Honest conversations about the parts of motherhood that don't get talked about nearly enough.
Source: Pam Tronson Coaching on Facebook


