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Beyond the Mommy Years: How to Live Happily Ever After...After the Kids Leave Home
 
 
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Beyond the Mommy Years: How to Live Happily Ever After...After the Kids Leave Home [Hardcover]

Carin Rubenstein (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 29, 2007
Thirty million mothers between 40 and 60 years old are about to face childless households for the first time in decades. For some women, it is a lonely and confusing time; but for the vast majority, it's a journey of joy and discovery. Through intensive and wide-ranging original research, author Carin Rubenstein reveals how and why some mothers thrive and others do not. She breaks the post-motherhood launch down into three stages--grief, relief, and joy. If a woman makes it through to the final stage, friendships blossom, work thrives, and she develops a renewed sense of confidence and well-being. While in many instances, increased time together hastens the end of a struggling marriage, most women discover their relationships improve when children leave. BEYOND THE MOMMY YEARS offers fascinating research, helpful advice, and amusing anecdotes to the millions facing this uncertain but potentially enriching stage of life.

"An encouraging counterarguement to the idea that an empty nest leads to an empty life."--Library Journal

"Carin Rubenstein, PhD., nails it: Any woman worried about her post-car pool life should read this book."--Sally Koslow, mother of two sons in their twenties, and author of Little Pink Slips

"Beyond the Mommy Years bridges the knowledge void felt by so many moms after their children leave for college...A thoughtful discussion of the positive changes that lie ahead for mothers after our children are launched. While parenting never ends, this book provides moms with the tools to live a rich and full life."--Linda Perlman Gordon & Susan Morris Shaffer, co-authors of Mom, Can I Move Back in with You?


Frequently Bought Together

Beyond the Mommy Years: How to Live Happily Ever After...After the Kids Leave Home + Barbara & Susan's Guide to the Empty Nest: Discovering New Purpose, Passion & Your Next Great Adventure + Chicken Soup for the Soul: Empty Nesters: 101 Stories about Surviving and Thriving When the Kids Leave Home (Chicken Soup for the Soul (Quality Paper))
Price For All Three: $51.81

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Editorial Reviews

Review

'Carin Rubenstein nails i: the 'empty nest' is, for most women a myth. Any woman worried about her post-car pool life should read this book.' Sally Koslow

About the Author

CARIN RUBENSTEIN, PhD, lives in
Sleepy Hollow, New York.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Grand Central Life & Style (August 29, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0446580805
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446580809
  • Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 1.2 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,039,179 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars I now feel baggy, saggy and old!, January 7, 2010
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Basically this book made me feel much older than I did before I read it. Not to mention much less attractive, more baggy, saggy etc. than I think any woman needs to feel, especially after buying someone's book to learn more about the years after your children leave. Her take on or what she gleans from her research is definitely sagging towards sexual attractiveness after the age of 49 is all but nil, except to our long suffering, non straying husbands who have no choice but to love us for what we have become. So in order to really have a jazzy, happy home life after the kids leave, we have to make do or leave and find someone new to make us feel sensual again the way we did in our long ago past when we were attractive to others, preferably someone that is younger than us old worn out hags. Oh there is some hope as she shares stories of couples that are having fun and are not repulsed by each other. But this seems to be based only on her research examples...not her take on things when she inserts that on many occasions.

The two stars are only because I took a bit of hope from the rare glimpses into happily, attractive feeling and basically well sexed women that are happy after the children are gone. But mostly it as if we become, as she states,(this is her word...invisible) invisible beings who face the thought of making love as if it is the same as making yourself go to the gym to work out. I think it would have been more helpful to leave out her sardonic take on things, which seem as if she is a woman only marginally surviving her golden years. I liked the bit on being a confronter. It made sense.

She also has, in my opinion,a very nasty take on women of any sorts of means. For example, she refers to someone's home as a monstrosity....where does a author in a self help type book get off making judgments against people's lifestyles. What does her obviously, negative take on people's consumer, clothing style, exercise routine or decorating choices have to do with helping others in the years beyond Mommyness. I wonder what the women she interviewed think of her descriptions of their homes and for instance the woman she talked about that loves to show off her many diamonds. There are too many examples of this type of talk to relate here. I loathe any judgments such as she makes in her book about people's choices of homes, attire, lifestyles or hairstyles. I have a sense of humor, if she is indeed trying to be entertaining, but these comments make me think of jealous, gossipy old crags sitting around drying up because their estrogen levels are low and grousing about other women. But to me, she was probably doing this sort of snappish, envious judgments before her ovaries conked out and well before she wrote this book.

Before I read this book, at 5'5" 115#, decent hair, attractive feeling woman...I was feeling good about my prospects when my son leaves this fall and was hoping for some positive transition input. There was a bit of that,but this book also cast a very dark shadow. I now feel like I am wrinkled, saggy, overweight,paunchy, undesirable and sexless. But thank goodness I am invisible...so no one can see all this nastiness that I am at 49. Thank goodness my supposedly balding, paunchy husband(he is none of this) can put up with me.
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13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Helpful and Insightful, September 18, 2007
By 
M. Vosk (Alpharetta, GA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Beyond the Mommy Years: How to Live Happily Ever After...After the Kids Leave Home (Hardcover)
This book is helping me get through a very rough period in my life. It is giving me some insight regarding this empty nester phase of life.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some Good Information - Some Concerns, August 21, 2011
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This review is from: Beyond the Mommy Years: How to Live Happily Ever After...After the Kids Leave Home (Hardcover)
My initial response to the book was positive - while many stated that the book was heavy on facts and statistics, they were interspersed with the stories of real women that the author had met and interviewed - often having coffee and tea with the empty-nesters.

The negatives: The author often writes long descriptions of the financial status of the women including details of the design and size of the homes - even calling one home a "monstrosity" - I grimaced at the nearly 2 page description of the home, the clothing, the manicures - I often felt I was reading People magazine and not a book on transcending the "Mommy Years" and getting through the empty-nest period. I sensed judgment which resulted in my not wanting to read the book and had great difficulty seeing the author as a researcher, a story teller and someone who could speak to the sometimes painful transition from empty nest to joy. I found myself wondering if the author were envious of the status of these women and the description of their body types, fitness level and good looks. I question the need for this information as women of all economic groups can and do feel the sadness of leaving one role behind and searching for a new self - money, fitness, good looks, and big homes do not increase or lessen the phenomenon.

There is much to be written about this subject but this particular book didn't do it for me. As a counselor and coach, I could not recommend this book to any of my friends, colleagues or clients as there was too much focus on the wrong details.



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