It was a Sunday afternoon when it hit me.
My phone rang, and I saw my younger son’s name on the screen; my heart did that little leap it always does when one of my boys calls.
We chatted about his work, his kids’ latest adventures, the weather.
Then, as we wrapped up, he mentioned offhandedly that they’d been to the beach the previous weekend.
The whole family had a barbecue, played volleyball, and built sandcastles with the kids.
“Sounds wonderful,” I said, keeping my voice steady.
It did sound wonderful but, the thing is, we live forty minutes apart.
That’s when I understood something that had been dancing around the edges of my awareness for years: my children love me deeply, but they don’t actually miss me.
Not the way I miss them, and not with that ache that makes me pick up the phone just to hear their voices, or that pull that has me driving past their neighborhoods hoping to catch a glimpse of normalcy in their driveways.
The difference between love and longing
Love and missing someone aren’t the same thing, though we often bundle them together like they’re inseparable.
My sons love me, and I have no doubt about this.
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They remember my birthday, they include me in major celebrations, they answer when I call.
They’re good men, raising good families, but their days flow perfectly well without me in them.
Missing someone is different.
It’s active; it’s that nagging feeling that something’s incomplete, reaching for the phone because you want to share a small victory or a funny observation, or planning your weekend and automatically factoring someone in because their absence would feel wrong.
When I retired at sixty-three, earlier than I’d planned thanks to a restructuring package, I had all these visions of being more involved, more present, and more needed.
What I discovered instead was that my sons had already built their lives, and those lives had a rhythm that didn’t require my participation to keep beating.
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Why our children don’t miss us the way we miss them
Here’s the thing nobody tells you about raising successful, independent children: You’ve done your job so well that they don’t need you anymore.
Needing and missing often go hand in hand.
Think about it: When my boys were young, I was woven into the fabric of their every day.
I was the one who knew where the soccer cleats were, who helped with homework, who they’d tell about their day the moment they walked through the door.
Missing me would have been like missing breathing.
I was just there, essential and assumed, but that’s exactly what we’re supposed to do as parents, right? Raise them to not need us, to be complete without us, and to build their own families and routines and Sunday traditions that may or may not include us.
Now, they have partners who know their daily rhythms, children who need them the way they once needed me, and friends who share their current struggles and victories.
Their emotional cups are full.
There’s no empty space shaped like dad that needs filling.
Meanwhile, I have empty spaces shaped like them everywhere.
In the quiet of my morning coffee, in the extra time retirement has given me, and in the stories I want to tell that would land better with someone who shares my history.
The phone calls that reveal everything
You can tell a lot about relationship dynamics by who initiates contact.
I call my sons, they call me back.
I suggest dinners, they check their calendars.
I offer to take the grandkids for the day, they appreciate it when it works with their schedule.
This is the natural order of things that nobody prepared me for.
When I take my local grandkids to the park on weekends, which has become the highlight of my week, I watch other grandparents and see the same recognition in their eyes.
We’re the ones who cleared our Saturdays, drove across town, and holding tight to these moments while our adult children are relieved to have a few hours to run errands or just breathe.
The hardest part? When my four grandkids, ranging from three to eleven, run to greet me with pure joy, I see what missing someone looks like.
Yet, I also know that this too shall pass.
One day they’ll be teenagers, then adults, and I’ll become the grandfather they love but don’t particularly miss.
Making peace with being peripheral
If you’re a regular reader, you may remember I’ve written about the importance of preparing mentally for retirement, not just financially.
Well, preparing for this shift in family dynamics is part of that mental preparation that nobody mentions in retirement seminars.
You have to make peace with being peripheral, loved but not longed for, and welcomed but not essential.
Some days I handle this better than others as there are moments when I want to shake my sons gently and say, “One day you’ll understand this feeling,” but that would be unfair.
They’re living their lives exactly as they should, focusing forward, building their futures.
The fact that they don’t miss me is actually evidence that I did something right.
They’re not walking around with dad-shaped holes in their hearts.
I’ve started finding meaning in other places: In the writing I do now, in the friends who do miss me when I skip our coffee meetups, in the small difference I make in my grandkids’ lives, even if it’s temporary, and in accepting that love doesn’t always look the way we want it to.
Closing thoughts
At seventy-four, I’ve learned that understanding the difference between being loved and being missed is perhaps one of the most painful gifts of aging.
It forces you to reckon with your place in the world, with the success of your parenting, with the natural flow of life that moves always forward, never back.
My sons love me, they’ll grieve me when I’m gone and tell stories about me to their children.
But today? They’re not thinking about me, they’re not missing me, and that’s okay.
So, I’ll keep calling first, suggesting dinners, and being grateful for the love that exists, even if it doesn’t ache the way mine does.
Missing someone is about what we need, but loving someone? That’s about accepting what they need.
What my children need is the freedom to love me without the burden of longing for me.
Isn’t that what we wanted for them all along?
