June 29, 2026
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Few losses are as confusing as losing a relationship with someone who is still alive. Parent–adult child estrangement is a growing reality for many families, yet it remains one of the least acknowledged forms of grief. Unlike the loss of a loved one through death, estrangement often unfolds in silence, leaving parents and children alike navigating unanswered questions, emotional pain, and an uncertain future.
During this GoldCare Masterclass, Trauma-Informed Coach Karen Croll explored the emotional, physical, and spiritual impact of family disconnection, offering insight into why estrangement can be so devastating and how healing remains possible, even when reconciliation is not.
When a loved one dies, society has rituals to acknowledge the loss. Friends send flowers, offer condolences, and provide support. Estrangement is different. The grief is often invisible, and many people suffer quietly without understanding, validation, or community.
Parents experiencing estrangement frequently continue their daily routines while carrying profound emotional pain beneath the surface. They attend work, family gatherings, church services, and social events, all while struggling with feelings of sadness, confusion, guilt, longing, and heartbreak. Because there is no clear ending to the relationship, the grief can feel ongoing and unresolved.
Adding to the challenge is the reality that estrangement is often misunderstood. Many people assume there must be a single cause or someone to blame. In reality, family disconnection is rarely the result of one event. More often, it develops through years of misunderstandings, unmet expectations, communication breakdowns, changing family dynamics, and unresolved wounds.
Relationships are not only emotional experiences; they are deeply connected to human biology and well-being. The parent–child bond is one of the strongest attachment relationships people experience throughout life. When that connection is disrupted, the effects often extend beyond the heart.
Chronic stress, sleep disturbances, anxiety, depression, loss of appetite, emotional eating, brain fog, and fatigue are common among those experiencing family estrangement. The body interprets the loss of a core relationship as a threat, activating stress responses that can remain elevated for long periods of time.
This connection between emotional pain and physical health highlights an important truth: grief is not just something people think about. It is something they carry in their bodies. Unprocessed emotional pain can manifest in many ways, influencing energy levels, hormonal balance, digestion, and overall wellness.
For many parents, estrangement is not only the loss of a relationship. It can also feel like the loss of identity.
Years or even decades are often invested in raising children. Parenting becomes a central part of daily life, personal purpose, and future plans. When that relationship changes dramatically or disappears altogether, difficult questions often emerge:
Who am I now?
What is my purpose?
Will I ever see my child again?
What happens to the future I imagined?
These questions reveal why estrangement can feel so overwhelming. It affects not only relationships but also a person's sense of self, family traditions, dreams, and expectations for the future.
One of the defining characteristics of estrangement is what many experts describe as ambiguous grief. Unlike losses that provide a clear ending, estrangement leaves the door partially open.
The child is still alive. A phone call could come. A message could arrive. Reconciliation remains possible, yet uncertain. This ongoing state of hope, fear, confusion, and longing can create an emotional roller coaster that lasts for years.
Without closure, many individuals find themselves caught between holding on and moving forward. The uncertainty itself becomes part of the burden they carry.
A powerful theme throughout the presentation was the distinction between healing and reconciliation.
While many parents hope for reconciliation, healing does not depend entirely on another person's choices. Waiting for someone else to change can leave individuals feeling powerless. Focusing on personal healing creates opportunities for growth regardless of the relationship's future outcome.
The healing process begins with acknowledging the reality of the loss and allowing space for grief. Self-compassion becomes essential, replacing self-blame and harsh judgment with understanding and care. Forgiveness, empathy, and healthy emotional boundaries also play important roles in restoring a sense of stability and peace.
Over time, healing involves rediscovering identity beyond the parenting role. Many people begin exploring their values, strengths, interests, and goals in ways they may not have considered for years. This process helps create a renewed sense of purpose and possibility.
Moving forward does not mean forgetting the relationship or abandoning hope. Instead, it means creating a life that remains meaningful despite uncertainty.
Finding new ways to contribute, pursuing creative interests, serving others, and building supportive communities can help individuals reconnect with joy and purpose. Rather than allowing estrangement to define every aspect of life, healing creates room for growth, resilience, and renewal.
The path may not be easy, but it is possible.
Perhaps the most important takeaway from this discussion is that a broken relationship does not have to mean a broken life. The pain of estrangement is real, and the grief deserves acknowledgment. Yet healing remains possible, even when answers are incomplete and reconciliation has not occurred.
Family disconnection can leave deep wounds, but it does not erase a person's worth, purpose, or capacity for joy. By facing the grief honestly, seeking support, and embracing the process of healing, individuals can move toward greater peace while continuing to hope for what the future may bring.