By the time we reached our 50s and 60s, most of us thought the hardest years of parenting were behind us. The toddler tantrums, the teenage battles, the sleepless nights – we survived them all. We figured the hard part was done. We thought we had “earned” the rest.
But then adulthood arrived for our kids, and with it, a new kind of ache.
Maybe your child is battling substance use. Maybe they’re caught in the grip of depression. Or maybe they’re unable to launch into independent adulthood. You’ve poured years of energy, money, love, and prayer into helping them. And still, they’re not okay.
And the quiet whisper in your heart is: “This must be my fault.”
Mothers in midlife often carry guilt like a second skin. We were told from the start that we were the “architects” of our children’s futures. Every parenting book promised results if we just did it right. Raise them in a certain way, and the outcome was guaranteed. Or so we were told.
So, when things go wrong, we assume it’s on us. We replay their childhood like a movie reel:
But the truth is more complex. Human beings are not products on an assembly line. They are souls with free will. Their choices, their wiring, their circumstances – none of it is fully in our control.
Yes, your love mattered. Yes, your guidance shaped them. But the final script of their life is not yours to write.
You were responsible for guiding them, not for guaranteeing their outcome.
Here’s the danger: guilt steals your second act.
While you’re busy replaying the past, you’re missing the present. While you’re clutching at control, you’re forgetting that your life still has chapters to be written.
You’ve spent decades pouring yourself out for others. If you let guilt run your life, you’ll pour out your joy, too. And you’ll miss the chance to discover the richness that still awaits you in this season.
This isn’t about abandoning your child. It’s about refusing to abandon yourself.
So how do you let go? Start small.
That insistent voice that whispers, “It’s all my fault.” Replace it with truth: “I did my best with what I knew.” You cannot heal while listening to lies.
Their healing is not your job. Their choices are not your punishment. Your role is to love – but also to step back. Your job now is to live your life.
Pick up that hobby you set aside. Say yes to the group you’ve been curious about. Take the trip you keep postponing. Dare to find joy, even if your child isn’t ready for theirs.
You’re not betraying them when you reclaim your life. You’re modeling resilience, which may be the very thing they need to see.
And remember: you are not the only influence in your child’s story. God, community, circumstance, and their own choices all weave into the tapestry. It’s not all on your shoulders. It never was.
You don’t have to spend your golden years in chains of regret. You can love your child deeply and live your life fully.
Their choices are not your report card. Their struggles are not the measure of your motherhood.
Your life is still yours to live.
Mama, you did your best. Now it’s time to give yourself permission to live the rest.
What kinds of issues are your adult children facing? How and why do you blame yourself for them? Is there another way of thinking about things that might be healthier for you?
Tags Adult Children
My 36 year old son lives with me now. He has for the last 10+ years. No job. No will to try to get one. He had a job for 1 year and his attitude was wonderful. Then the addiction began again and boom it was gone. I am on the edge of eviction after living here 21 years because he makes 1 neighbor nervous (he talks to himself) I will not be able to afford the rent paid these days. I don’t want my son to live on the streets either though. I have the spare bedroom and food to share. If I’m to care for anyone it would of course be the son I love. The only other family member there is is my other son but he’s married and a father to 5. EVERYONE wants me to boot him onto the streets. He has NO friends. Not even one. I would not recover myself if he ended up committing suicide because I know in my heart that is where it would lead. It’s not as easy as this article and others want you to believe
Hi B.
Have you tried exposing your son to a good, God fearing church? Or to the truth that he is a man and is responsible before God for his household?
Here’s a great video to get him to watch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnqSNEiLTeY&t=617s
It’s time for men to get their act together and stop acting like they can’t handle life. Life is tough, true, but whining and laying around won’t get them anywhere. Weak men learn to rely on their mothers. Strong, God fearing men are responsible and bring blessings to their mothers.
If you are a loving parent, you will point him in the right direction, cheer him on, and then watch him be the man God called him to be.
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