I went through a period when my home became a constant revolving door. I moved to a new church the year my youngest son went to college. With only one child left at home, I told my youngest daughter, how strange it was going to be with just the two of us. What I hadn’t expected, was a returning college graduate who couldn’t find a job, and a son taking time off from college.
Through the next ten years, I would be surprised by one or another of my seven young adult children returning. A divorce, a marriage, going back to school, getting out of the Navy, changing schools, another college graduate waiting on a job, were reasons to move in with mom. Stays might last a couple of months, or at other times a year or two or three. My friends would start conversations by asking how many children were with me on that day. Keeping track of my changing and evolving family life must have been a challenge for my neighbors. Cars would fill my driveway and spill into the street. For a brief period I had the house to myself. Yet, a mere two months later five kids were back home.
I understand this phenomenon started in the 90’s, but has become even more common among today’s parents. The high cost of housing has caused many young people to detour on the way out of the family home. This ebb and flow of returning family members demands from all a great deal of flexibility in dealing with one other. Along with revolving children, are the interruptions that accompany such movement. Oddly, it is in those interruptions that real living gets done.
Interruptions cause us to reorient ourselves and our focus. They force us to determine what is valuable and what isn’t . . . what is necessary and what is simply excess. More often than not, interruptions give opportunity to work at relationships, lend support and encouragement, assist with a need or simply be the listening ear someone else needs. They can be blessings as we open ourselves to what God has to say to us, through them.
Years have passed since the last child stayed for a time. Looking backwards, I see that era in my life as a gift and a grace. One I would never have planned for myself.
“Children are a blessing
and a gift from the Lord.”
Psalm 127:3
*A version of this post was previously published as, “Revolving Doors and The Grace of Interruptions” on April 19, 2015
Discover more from A Pastor's Heart
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

I’m used to a sort of negativity around this new trend. I like your beautiful perspective. ❤️
LikeLiked by 1 person
There was a blessing in having my children around as young adults.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is lovely and close to me. My son and his wife (now in mid forties) have been living with us for seven years. the first five years were in the tiny house with one bathroom where we had lived for many years and two years ago our other child facilitated our moving into a house with an “in-law apartment” so they have more privacy. Though they are with us because of illness, they care for us as well. It is a blessing. thank you for your thoughts!
LikeLiked by 1 person
This sounds like it is good for all of you. The new house with extra privacy for everyone, but still able to be there for each other. I was just reading a Mayo Clinic piece on healthy aging, that talks about the need for social connections. Something, which you have built into your lives.
https://mcpress.mayoclinic.org/healthy-aging/a-surprising-key-to-healthy-aging-strong-social-connections/?mc_id=us&utm_source=pes&utm_medium=e&utm_content=engagement&utm_campaign=mayoclinic&geo=national&placementsite=enterprise&invsrc=patloy&cauid=122853
LikeLike
Thank you and thanks for the article … and, yes, always thinking so gratefully of the Mayo Clinic in general. My grandmother literally lived there for a year when she had her breasts removed in the 1920’s. I’m glad I was a ble to know her.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Its hard to fathom successful surgery on Breast Cancer that long ago. What a gift to be able to know her and her story.
LikeLiked by 1 person