It’s been a rough few months, even by 2022 pandemic standards.
In November, my mother – who was my father’s full-time caregiver – had a stroke. In December, both of my 19-year-old sons decided that college wasn’t for them and moved back home, with no alternate plans in place. My 14 year old is currently struggling to find his academic motivation and social footing after two years of Covid-19.
So, for the last four months, I’ve spent time taking care of my parents who a two-and-a-half hour drive away, while fielding daily calls and figuring out logistics for my kids back home. And when I’m at my home, I’m fielding calls from my parents (who are in cognitive decline). Oh, and I continue to work full-time, often from hospital parking garages.
I’m happy that I can be there for my family. But the daily juggle of being a sandwich-generation caregiver has left me exhausted, and also seeking some bigger truths. If I go right from caring for my children to caring for my parents, when do I get to focus on me? When do I get to really dive into the meaty years of my career? Or, I don’t know, do things I want to do when I want to do them, like travel or (gasp!) pick up a hobby?
A family friend recently told me, “you know, taking care of your parents teaches you a lot about yourself.” That person was right. But I haven’t liked what I’ve learned.
For example, I’ve learned that I am just not good at being alone with what little alone time I have.In all of the chaos of managing two very needy households – all while working full-time in a leadership role – I’ve had very little alone time. I’ve done an OK job at self-care, getting outside for daily exercise and hitting the sack early most nights. But truly being alone? In the quiet? All by myself? While awake? Nope. Not so much.
And as it turns out, spending time alone is an essential component to our mental health and sense of self. According to Washington, D.C.-based executive coach and Dr. Kiban Turner, “…people who spend time alone are happier, report lower levels of stress, and have lower rates of depression.”
I realized that I had never really spent much time alone. I’ve never lived alone, going from my childhood home with parents and brother, to sharing a room with college roommates, to living with my then-boyfriend, now-husband. I skipped right over the young-single-gal-in-the-city stage. And those rare times when I do have the house to myself? I automatically crave the engagement of my friends. And if they’re not available, I go right to social media on my phone.
Take for example, Christmas Day. After waking up my grumpy teenagers at the unthinkable hour of 11 a.m., making them a big breakfast and giving gifts, the boys took off in my 2011 Mini Cooper convertible to show off their new threads on the preternaturally warm 68 degree day in Virginia. My husband, a cyclist, went out for a “short ride.”
I should have been happy with the quiet. I had taken the easy route that day with a pre-cooked honey-baked ham dinner. The house was clean. I had no work. I literally had nothing to do and nowhere to be.
I dragged my Sonos Roam outside, played “Folksy Christmas” and tried to enjoy the solitude. But I was miserable, unable to enjoy my own company. That’s when I texted my friend from middle school, Chad Hutchinson, who I knew would be spending Christmas alone, and not terribly unhappy about it.
For as long as I’ve known him, Chad has charted his own path. A single man in his 40s with no kids or pets, he travels, he sees live music with the fervor of someone half his age. And sometimes he does nothing. And he is good with it. With a string of side hustles from census worker to substitute teaching and even appearing as an extra in “Friday Night Lights,” Chad has largely avoided the 9-to-5 trappings that most would consider hallmarks of adult success, and has even embarked on a poetry career.
With a shared love of live music, I’ve run into Chad at shows in our very musical hometown of Charlottesville, Virginia and see him every summer at our favorite musical festival. He’s what some might call a bon vivant, a man about town. A guy who lets the good times roll.
Which is why it struck me that when I reached out to him on one of my many nights back in my hometown taking care of my parents, he declined and said “I’m a bit of a hermit these days.” I finally cajoled him out to the beer hall owned by our mutual friend since middle school. “I’ve been spending a lot of time alone and I LOVE IT,” he told me.
So, on that lonely Christmas afternoon, I thought about Chad. I texted him. I asked what he loved about being alone, and he said “the solitude.” When I admitted that I’d need training wheels to work up to this, that it’s been a minute (or maybe ever) since I have truly been alone, Chad gave me a prescription for solitude. It goes like this:
1. Close your eyes and be still.
2. Ask: what would make me feel the best right now?
3. Do it.
4. Give yourself permission to lay on a blanket and stare at the clouds
with headphones loud without answering to anyone.
5. Turn “do not disturb” on your phone.








