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Estranged But Not Erased: Finding Yourself Beyond Motherhood

By Christine Field September 12, 2025 Family

For decades, you lived for your children. Every meal, every carpool, every bedtime story – your life was wrapped around theirs. Motherhood wasn’t just a role; it was your identity, your calling, your heartbeat.

So, when that connection is severed – whether through estrangement, conflict, or circumstances beyond your control – it feels like someone has erased a part of you. The silence can feel louder than any argument. The absence, heavier than any goodbye.

But here’s the truth: estrangement may cut you off from your child, but it cannot erase you.

You are still here. You are still whole – and you are still worthy of joy.

The Unique Grief of Estrangement

Estrangement is unlike any other loss. When someone dies, there is a funeral, a ritual of closure. When a friend drifts away, there’s often an understanding, even if unspoken. But when your child pulls away – or pushes you out – the wound stays raw. There is no ceremony of release, no formal acknowledgment of your grief. Just silence.

And in that silence, shame often creeps in. Other moms post smiling photos of family gatherings and Sunday dinners. You scroll, you smile politely, and then you quietly set down your phone and cry in secret. You wonder, “What did I do wrong? Why doesn’t my story look like theirs?”

But comparison is cruel. Every family has shadows, even those who look picture-perfect on social media. Yours may be more visible right now, but that does not diminish your worth as a woman, or as a mother. The fact that you are grieving so deeply is proof of your love.

Beyond Motherhood: Rediscovering You

Here’s the truth many of us forget: motherhood was one of your roles, not the sum total of your identity. It was never meant to be the only way you define yourself. You are a daughter, a friend, a dreamer, a thinker, a woman who has lived, loved, and endured.

What if you allowed yourself to rediscover the pieces of you that got buried under the weight of motherhood? The parts that once loved art, travel, writing, gardening, or quiet walks in nature. The parts that light up at the thought of learning something new, or laughing with a friend until your sides ache.

This is not selfish. It’s survival. Reinvention. It is how you move from feeling erased by someone else’s absence to being written into your own beautiful story again.

You don’t stop being a mother when a child steps away. But you are invited, in this hard space, to become more fully yourself.

Holding Space for Hope

Estrangement today does not mean estrangement forever. Some stories end in reconciliation, often after years of waiting and praying. Others don’t, and that reality is painful. But you can hold hope in one hand and healing in the other. Both can exist together.

You can allow yourself to keep the door cracked open – while also choosing not to live in a hallway of waiting. Hope does not mean putting your life on pause. Healing means learning how to breathe, create, laugh, and live, even in the face of uncertainty.

You Are Still Whole

Estranged but not erased. That’s the truth. You are still alive, still valuable, still radiant. Don’t wait for someone else to return before you give yourself permission to thrive.

Your second act is waiting – and it has your name written all over it.

Discussion Questions:

Are you walking through estrangement or carrying the ache of distance with your adult child? You are not alone. Let’s share our stories and remind each other of this: even in loss, our lives can still bloom.

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Mary Lou Harris

Thank you for this article.

Allison

This article does hit home for me. Its been 10 years and two daughters after a divorce. I had grandchildren that were also part of the estrangement. I cannot imagine a reconciliation when I was not in their lives to see them grow. To the person who said “what about the child rather than the mother” They made a choice to go with their father they are adults, it was not my choice. It saddens me everyday, but it will not define me. Using children as pawns is the worst punishment of all and very hard to forgive.

TERRI

This really hit home for me. Thank you.

allison

Estrangement is so cruel, but sometimes it is necessary when the disrespect is so awfully hurtful and damaging as well. It’s been four years since I’ve seen my son and grandchildren. My DIL somehow felt she could make her problem with family member my problem, which I knew nothing about. Yelled at me, made us all cry, my son stood by manipulating the whole situation and allowed it all. They left forcing the estrangement, I however have been working on healing and am estranged by choice. So very hard.
You are not alone in this, we are many, unfortunately. Praying for us all in this extremely hard journey. Never forget who you are.

Frances

My oldest son cut off from the entire family about 2 1/2 years ago. I understand a feeling that you could never trust them again, but I will never give up on keeping the door open and hoping a reconciliation will happen. None of us were ever given a reason for this. It was his choice and continues to be his choice. We just pray every night for healing for him so he will want to come back and rejoin the family.

The Author

Christine Moriarty Field is an author, attorney, and speaker. After homeschooling her four children, life fell apart. Divorced after 33 years, she dealt with unimaginable challenges with her adult children, including drug addiction, estrangement, and mental health issues. Therapy, prayer and introspection led her to encourage moms facing similar challenges. She is a criminal defense attorney and a recently remarried pastor’s wife. Learn more HERE.

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