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Keren David

ByKeren David, Keren David

Opinion

The empty nest is full again, and that’s a gift

'If pandemics are allowed to have silver linings, then this is mine, a chance to spend weeks and weeks with my family.'

July 2, 2020 16:01
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3 min read

Exactly one year ago this weekend, I was in Amsterdam. We’d gone there — me and my husband and our children — to celebrate, well, ourselves.

We’d just had our silver wedding anniversary, it was our daughter’s 23rd birthday, she was about to graduate from university. Our son, 19, was about to go travelling, all paid for by himself, and then on to university. It felt like a landmark weekend, and where better to mark it than the city where we’d lived for eight years when they were little?

It felt as though we were also marking the end of an era. The kids were pretty much all grown up, and leading their own lives. And although our daughter was coming back to live at home, after four years away, we suspected that would only be temporary. The battered old nest was preparing for emptiness. There was a slight undertone of sadness as we celebrated, a feeling that the closeness of those childhood years were drawing to an end.

Well, how wrong we were! For the past three and a half months, the nest has been well and truly full. We’ve been experiencing a new kind of family life, one of four adults co-existing. It has not been the easiest thing in the world. But if pandemics are allowed to have silver linings, then this is mine, a chance to spend weeks and weeks with my family.