No One Asked Me for a Snack Today

No One Asked Me for a Snack Today

For the first time in a long time, my house is quiet.

My son is spending five weeks with his dad in Buffalo this summer, and we’re about halfway through. We’ve done extended visits before, but this one feels different. Maybe it’s because he’s older. Maybe it’s because I’m older. Or maybe it’s because I’m starting to realize that parenting is really just a series of small rehearsals for letting go.

The Unsettling Quiet of an Empty House

No one has asked me for a snack in nearly three weeks.

No one needs a ride to camp.

No one is yelling from another room because they can’t find their favorite shirt.

No one is negotiating for five more minutes before bed or asking what’s for dinner at 3:30 in the afternoon.

And if I’m being honest, I’ve found the quiet a little unsettling.

I miss my son terribly. I think about him constantly. I wonder what he’s doing, if he’s having fun, and whether he’s remembering to wear sunscreen. I still find myself glancing at the clock and mentally calculating what he’d be doing at that exact moment.

Missing Him and Enjoying the Break

But I’ve also enjoyed parts of this season.

  • Drinking my coffee while it’s still hot.
  • Taking my time at the grocery store.
  • Watching a show without pausing it every ten minutes.
  • Deciding at 8 p.m. that cereal sounds like a perfectly acceptable dinner option.

And that’s the part that many parents don’t say out loud.

Two Things Can Be True

We often feel pressure to experience parenting in absolutes. If we miss our children, we shouldn’t appreciate the break. If we’re enjoying ourselves, maybe we must not miss them enough. If we feel relief, guilt tends to show up shortly afterward to remind us that good parents aren’t supposed to enjoy being needed less.

But that’s not how human emotions work.

As a therapist, I spend a lot of time helping people make room for competing feelings.

  • You can be deeply grateful for your partner and still occasionally crave alone time.
  • You can love your career and feel burned out by it.
  • You can miss a relationship that ended and know it was the right decision.
  • You can miss your child with every fiber of your being while also enjoying not having to make three meals a day.

Two things can be true.

When Caregiving Becomes Part of Your Identity

The challenge is that caregiving has a way of becoming more than just something we do. It can become who we are.

Especially for Mothers

Over time, we become experts at anticipating needs. We know which child hates tomatoes, which one sleeps with the fan on, and which stuffed animal cannot be left behind under any circumstances. We manage schedules, emotional meltdowns, appointments, birthday parties, permission slips, sports registrations, dentist visits, and a seemingly endless supply of snacks.

Much of it becomes automatic.

We don’t wake up every morning and consciously decide to place ourselves at the center of someone else’s world. We simply do it because that’s what love looks like in this season.

What Happens When the Caregiving Pauses?

But when the caregiving temporarily pauses, something interesting happens.

Space appears.

And space can be surprisingly uncomfortable.

Without the constant demands, we’re left alone with ourselves.

  • The thoughts we’ve been too busy to think.
  • The decisions we’ve postponed making.
  • The hobbies we’ve abandoned.
  • The books sitting unread on our nightstands.
  • The realization that we’ve spent years asking everyone else what they need and very little time asking ourselves the same question.

The Loss of Parenting Rhythm

I’ve noticed this with clients, too.

Empty nesters often describe the transition as disorienting. Parents whose children leave for college sometimes report feeling unexpectedly sad, restless, or untethered. Even parents whose children are simply away at camp can experience a strange sense of purposelessness.

Not because they don’t have lives outside of parenting.

But because caregiving creates rhythm.

  • It gives shape to our days.
  • It creates a sense of purpose.
  • It provides structure and predictability.

And when that rhythm changes, even temporarily, we have to decide what fills the silence.

For some people, that’s exciting.

For others, it’s anxiety-provoking.

For many of us, it’s both.

Learning to Sit With the Silence

I’ve spent the past few weeks trying not to rush through this quieter season.

  • Trying not to immediately fill every empty hour.
  • Trying not to turn extra time into another productivity project.

Instead, I’ve been practicing something that doesn’t come naturally to me: simply noticing.

  • Noticing what I miss.
  • Noticing what I don’t miss.
  • Noticing what I enjoy.
  • Noticing what feels lonely.
  • Noticing who I am when no one needs me to solve a problem, pack a lunch, or remind them to brush their teeth.

Allowing the Season to Be What It Is

I don’t think there are profound answers waiting for me at the end of this exercise.

I don’t expect to emerge from five weeks of solo parenting hiatus as some fully evolved version of myself.

But I do think there is value in allowing ourselves to experience seasons as they are instead of judging ourselves for how we feel inside them.

Holding Two Truths at Once

Because parenting seems to be one long lesson in holding two truths at once.

  • Wanting to freeze time and wanting a little more freedom.
  • Feeling exhausted by being needed and heartbroken by the thought of being needed less.
  • Missing your child desperately while appreciating that, for one night, no one asked you for a snack.

Final Thoughts

And if you’re in a season where the people who usually rely on you don’t need you quite as much, maybe you don’t have to figure out what it all means right away.

Maybe you can simply allow yourself to miss them.

Allow yourself to enjoy the quiet.

And trust that loving someone deeply and learning to enjoy your own company were never competing experiences to begin with.

April Eldemire, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist at Couples Thrive
April Eldemire, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist
Couples Therapist · Couples Thrive — Fort Lauderdale, FL

April Eldemire is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and couples therapist at Couples Thrive in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She helps couples, individuals, and families work through relationship disconnection, communication breakdowns, infidelity, new-parenthood transitions, divorce-related stress, family conflict, grief, depression, and parenting challenges. April is trained in Gottman-Method Couples Therapy and Emotionally Focused Therapy, two research-based approaches used to help couples better understand negative interaction patterns, rebuild emotional connection, and strengthen the relationship over time.

Couples Therapy Marriage Counseling Premarital Counseling Infidelity Pregnancy & Postpartum Parenting Transitions Family Conflict Grief & Depression
Credentials: Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, State of Florida — License No. MT2614 (verify license).
Training: Gottman-Method Couples Therapy, Level 1, 2 & 3 Trained; Bringing Baby Home Educator; trained in Emotionally Focused Therapy.
Education: Nova Southeastern University, graduated 2007.
Office: 1 East Broward Blvd., Suite 700, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301 · (954) 654-9609.

Originally published June 2026 Author April Eldemire, LMFT

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