When the alarm goes off these days, I often wake from the same dream — rushing to toast a bagel for my youngest child before school. But in that same instant, I realize I don’t have to toast the bagels anymore. My husband and I are now empty nesters, our child far away at university. In that moment, the panic of oversleeping quickly turns into a sigh that intersperses longing for her presence with gratitude for the blessings in her life.
I don’t jump out of bed but lie there breathing, repeating to myself, “This is the day that the Lord has made; I will rejoice and be glad in it.”
Every day is a gift from God, and this season, more than any, has reminded me of His goodness. Some days I feel like a scratched record stuck on loop. But God is faithful. And, like Moses reminding Israel of God’s faithfulness, I remind myself multiple times a day.
I always knew empty nesting would be hard — my identity had been wrapped up in being a mother for most of my life. After stopping work to stay home, my schedule revolved around drop-offs, PTA meetings, sports, and a million other things that keep mothers insanely busy. As the children grew, I began looking for ways to utilize talents that had been dormant for years, wanting to define an identity shaped by motherhood while sharpening skills I knew were deep within me.
The days after moving our child into college were hard. The house was unbearably silent. We missed the pile of sneakers at the garage door and the scattered snack bowls. Everything was clean and orderly, and going upstairs was heartwrenching. I found myself drinking from her Stanley cup and using her lip balm — reminders of her presence. She was my little shadow, and the shadow had grown up.
Still, the days rolled on, and we practiced gratitude. We discovered new rhythms: unloading the dishwasher, running to the gym, weekend movies — all part of establishing routines not tied to the school calendar. Meeting new friends and having space for long conversations became part of new rhythms. The profound quiet wasn’t the enemy. I was learning to embrace a different pace that hadn’t existed in over two decades. The constant urgency was gone, and while initially jarring, it felt good to lean into this rhythm. I am discovering space for rest and reflection.
Healthy birds fly the nest, caring friends remind me. There is a bittersweet nature to raising children —you’re proud of who they’ve become while you grieve their departure, grateful yet sad. Every hair tie, tidy bed, and missed moment of not buying mini ice cream cones at Trader Joe’s brings a gulp to my throat.
But when the phone buzzes with texts about new friends, successful classes, or finding community at church, my heart fills with joy. I praise our good God who gives us strength to hold both extremes of emotion, who allows us to be sad while reminding us of bright moments.
Parenting refines us, drawing us closer to God if we allow it. It teaches us to surrender, give up control, and trust. When that chapter ends and a new one begins, we can grieve but continue stepping forward in faith, trusting that He is the author of all that is good.
I don’t toast the bagel every morning anymore, but I do empty the ice maker now. Our ice addict is no longer around. Still, hearing cubes fall into my cup brings a smile, knowing she’s probably doing the same thing on the other side of the country.
 
                     
                 
 
         
    


Sherene yes every day is a gift from God. Every day is a gift from the Lord. “This is the day the Lord has made let us rejoice and be glad in it. Psalm 118:24.” Another one that is good for us to say every day is “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord praise the Lord. Psalm 150:6” Here is a good saying for us all. “God gave you the gift of 86,400 seconds each day. Have you used one today to say Thank You God.” Have we? So many of us don’t. We go about our day and we are so busy we get tired to tired to spend time with God. Another good one is ” If your too busy to pray and read the word of God each day. You are busier than God ever wanted you to be” how true all these are. They are reminders for us. We should be doing them. Not letting life and things take over we have not time for God in our day. Satan would make us so busy we don’t have time for God we have to not let Satan do that. Remember every day is a gift that we are live from God. I had to get used to doing theses saying in my life. Even if means me getting up early before I get out of bed and spend it with God. Starting my day with God. It was hard but I feel it benefits. As it is displine for me. I am better focused and my days runs better even if I have a rought day. I am better focused as God is with me in it all. If it is a good day I praise God for it. I do that now. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little