There's missing vocabulary
That problematizes our success
The psycho-constabulary
Of middle class excesses
#SelfiePoem
#PhilosophyPoem
#1stWorldProblems
https://artfulparent.com/a-theres-no-word-in-english-for-the-specific-mix-of-pride-and-grief-a-parent-feels-watching-their-adult-child-not-need-them-anymore-which-is-perhaps-why-so-many-of-them-dont-talk-about-it/
That problematizes our success
The psycho-constabulary
Of middle class excesses
#SelfiePoem
#PhilosophyPoem
#1stWorldProblems
https://artfulparent.com/a-theres-no-word-in-english-for-the-specific-mix-of-pride-and-grief-a-parent-feels-watching-their-adult-child-not-need-them-anymore-which-is-perhaps-why-so-many-of-them-dont-talk-about-it/

There's no word in English for the specific mix of pride and grief a parent feels watching their adult child not need them anymore — which is perhaps why so many of them don't talk about it
Language does something beyond description. When we name a feeling, we give ourselves permission to have it. When there's no word for something, the feeling doesn't disappear. It just has nowhere to land, and tends to get folded away quietly without much ceremony. There is a feeling that belongs here, one that many parents of adult children carry even if they couldn't tell you what to call it. It arrives in ordinary moments: watching a grown child figure something out without calling to ask, noticing they make plans that don't include you, hearing confidence in their voice as they describe