Learn how to cope with and transform your empty nest, on the Sleep Number blog.
Sure, you could leave that cluttered room as a shrine to your college freshman, but wouldn't you love to use that space?
With the kids gone and college hopefully paid for, it's time to concentrate on you. How to save for retirement.
It's a good time to make your home fit your current needs
Read these 6 tips for adjusting to an empty nest to ease transition of living without your children in the home.
More than just keeping busy, overcoming the sadness of seeing children move on and out of the house is about reevaluating your life, experts say.
Time to decide if you want to renovate for a new lifestyle, rent out the extra space, or upgrade so you can host the next generation.
Parents aren't reining in spending, especially on their adult kids.
Children leaving home can change you just as much as bringing home your first child once did. But transitioning from full house to empty nest is a change that all parents know will eventually come. What are the stages of empty nest syndrome?
The time went by so quickly, perhaps too quickly, and now you're staring at their old bedroom wondering what to do with all the things they left behind. Sure, you went through everything, but there's probably still a lot left behind.
See how 10 couples reconfigure their living spaces after their children move out
So the children have all grown up and moved out … what now?
While it may be painful and hard, you can get through it successfully and learn to love the new life that is waiting for you in your empty nest. Getting to this point is a two-part process.
Empty nest syndrome is the feeling of grief that parents may feel when their kids leave the house to work or study.
When kids leave home and parents become empty nesters, it can be overwhelming. Watch this video with tips on how to deal with an empty nest from lifestyle ex...
The kids have either graduated for the last time or are back at college and have moved out for good (you hope). You’re now officially an “empty nester.” Whether you’re retired or still working, you have lots of options for transitioning to the next stage of your life: downsize, remodel, rent out a room or …
Smart Money: Majority of Irish people live in homes too large for their needs
If your last child is all grown up and about to leave home or has already moved out, you might be experiencing some mix emotions. A lot of parents struggle with what’s called “empty nes…
4 tips for adjusting to your college-bound child’s departure.