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© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

© Penelope Lemov and Parenting Grown Children, 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Vangogh blue room
 
So maybe you were thinking home office or crafts room or even a man cave. When the kids leave for college or for their first self-supporting job, thoughts of repurposing their bedrooms may dance in your head. After all, they've gone off to start their independent lives. They probably will not live with you again full-time. All they need when they come home for the holidays or for a brief respite  is a place to crash.

Not so fast, is the advice of Carl Pickhardt. Newly minted adult children can be unmoored by no longer having their bedroom to come home to. Writing in Psychology Today, he says that at this major jumping off place (leaving home to live independently), "it’s emotionally important to know that one has a family belonging place to return to, whether to visit for pleasure or for an emergency stay when there may be a need to boomerang home for a while."

Our recent grads may be adults, but he suggests that it's best not to think of this first foray into independence as a final “departure.” They are at the beginning of a “transition into more independence,” Pickhardt writes, adding these points:

*For many young people, it takes some measure of courage to move out and on into a new and different residence. To help make this move feel safe, parents can act to make membership in family remain secure.

*Parents often underestimate the difficulty of the last leg of growing up…. The demands for adequate self-care, the risky temptations offered by unsettled peers, the hardship of maintaining self-discipline, the increased availability of recreational drugs, the uncertainty of direction in life, and the widening scope of personal responsibility, these all conspire to make this final adolescent passage challenging indeed. 

*Unless parents have pressing practical needs to the contrary, I suggest not immediately repurposing the bedroom of an adolescent who is off at college, or otherwise starting to live away from home. Better, I believe, to keep that space as is for a few years, and for the young person to know that her or his family place is being securely held.

 

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8 responses to “Empty Nesting: There’s more to their childhood bedrooms than you think”

  1. Stacey Felice Avatar

    I converted the extra rooms to my craft room and there is no place for anyone to come back to live. I did that on purpose. Ha ha

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  2. penny Avatar

    We also commandeered our children’s bedrooms–though we waited ten years after they left to do it. They had both put down roots in other cities by then, but there was still a slight sense of shock the first time they came home for a visit and their old bedrooms were not there for them. They got over it.

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  3. candy Avatar
    candy

    After the last left the nest we cleaned out the room. Repainted and brought in new furniture etc. It a more grown up room and one they enjoy when they do come home.

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  4. penny Avatar

    As you suggest, we don’t have to keep their old bedrooms as sacred ground. But we do want to have a place in our homes where our adult children feel welcome and comfortable when they come to visit–even if it’s an extended one.
    thanks for stopping by candy

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  5. Brenda Avatar

    Well, we blew that one. We sold the whole house and started over again! Downsized! But all is well!

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  6. Sylvia Lance Avatar

    We blew that one as well! When the last one left, we sold the house, bought an RV and havent looked back. Thank goodness the kids come to us when we are camped at fun places!

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  7. amy Avatar

    I turned my son’s bedroom into a beauty room. I waited 5 years to do it, and he’s still upset about it..haha! My daughter’s room I just remodeled into a new guest room and she loves it.

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  8. penny Avatar

    we also waited to take over our children’s bedrooms. The dad was reluctant to do it. He still hoped they’d come home again. By the time we did it, our kids had put down roots in cities far from ours. They weren’t coming home again–except for a visit.

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