They don’t prepare you for this part of parenting in any baby book. Nobody tells you that decades after you’ve stopped cutting grapes into quarters and checking for fevers, you might face the hardest parenting decision of your life.
I was in my 60s when my phone rang with my daughter calling from county jail. In my wisdom years – when I should have had this parenting thing figured out. In my 60s, when I’d already survived the terrible twos, turbulent teens, and terrifying 20s.
But here’s what I’d learned: Sometimes wisdom looks like doing absolutely nothing.
For years, I’d been caught in what therapists call “enabling.” I prefer to call it “loving my daughter to death.” Every time she stumbled, I caught her. Every time she fell, I built a safety net. Lost her apartment? Move back home. Lost her job? I’d make some calls. Lost her way? I’d find it for her.
I thought I was being a good mother. I was actually being a barrier between my daughter and her own life.
I’d spent the last several years in a constant state of anxiety. Would she be okay? Would this be the crisis I couldn’t fix? I was pouring from an empty cup, and we were both drowning.
When she called from jail, my first instinct was pure mama bear. I was already mentally calculating bail money, rehearsing what I’d say to the judge, planning how I’d get her back on track – again.
But then something different happened. Maybe it was exhaustion. Maybe it was the clarity that sometimes comes at 2 a.m. Maybe it was grace. But I paused.
In that pause, I saw our future if I kept rescuing her: more crises, more calls, more years of both of us locked in this painful dance. I saw that my “love” was actually destroying her chance to grow up and my chance to have a life of my own.
So, I said the words that tore my heart out: “I love you. But I’m not coming.”
That night marked my introduction to what I now call The Pause Technique. It’s not about being cruel or punishing our adult children. It’s about creating space between their crisis and our response – space for them to grow and for us to breathe.
Here’s what the pause gave us:
There’s something particularly difficult about practicing tough love in our 60s. We’re acutely aware that time is precious. We wonder: What if this is the last chance? What if something happens and I wasn’t there?
But here’s the truth I learned: Being there doesn’t mean doing everything. Being there can mean stepping back so they can step forward.
At our age, we’ve earned the wisdom to know that some lessons can only be learned the hard way. We’ve lived long enough to see that character is built in struggle, not cushioned in comfort.
If you’re caught in the rescue cycle with an adult child, try this:
It’s been years since that phone call. My daughter is 36 now, living in her own apartment, working a job she’s proud of, building a life on a foundation she laid herself.
And me? Late in my 60s, I’m finally living my own life. I work. I travel. I write. I have energy for my friends, my interests, my own dreams. I’m not waiting for the next crisis call.
Our relationship is built on truth instead of rescue. She knows I love her. But she also knows I trust her to handle her own life.
The pause broke both our hearts. But sometimes things need to break before they can heal properly.
If you want to dig deeper into the rescue-and-regret cycle and how to get out, please look into my program, The Marriage and Motherhood Survival Method.
Have you struggled with letting an adult child face consequences? You’re not alone, and it’s never too late to change the pattern. Have you been able to practice the Pause?
Tags Adult Children
Good for you. You don’t say how long she had to stay in before getting out.
Just reading these similiar stories reassured me that, after 15 years of helping (enabling) my daughter in various ways (mainly money), that I did the right thing in sending her a long voice message recently saying that “I too” have bills to pay & have my own health issues & that she’d have to find a way to prioritize her low income. I suggested that perhaps she should see her case worker to help her through some issues with her life priorities.
She was ‘using’ a few years back & what I went through for years back then was horrendous. She’s clearly not using now, but the damage to her health, both mental & physical is already done.
This daughter (one of three) was the needy child, the sick child, “the different one”, my beautiful baby girl. Its taken me 15 years to finally step back & I did so much for her as I was afraid she wouldn’t survive. Its the FEAR factor that kept me trapped into enabling her.
One of my other daughters said to me recently, “mum yourve got a family history of heart attacks/strokes & there’s a very real chance of that happening to you if you continue worrying about her and keep letting her rely on you!”
I haven’t heard back from “the” daughter after I sent her the message about its time I started looking after my own life & that she is an adult & will find a way of making ends meet if she reaches out.If she needs help with food, mental health counselling etc, there are places she can go. Ive finally realised at 70 years young that I need to back off, out of love for my daughter.
There’s a possibility that I may not hear from her for a while & a risk that she could be homeless again, but its her life & my life is mine.
Ill check out Alan on etc and I know I need support from others who understand. Thanks for listening if you’ve got this far xx