Diana parent coach at Elephant Valley Safari Park San Diego

Elephant-sized Lesson On Letting Go

by | Mar 6, 2026

Swazi’s Parenting Master Class

Elephant matriarch, Swazi parenting her teens, a master class in parenting

The Human Version of the “Becoming”

As a mother of a college-bound teen, this scene felt strangely familiar. It’s what we do every day, isn’t it? We are the loving moms cheering from the sidelines, helping them reach just enough until they can grab hold on their own.

In an elephant herd, the matriarchs spend years teaching their young everything they need to survive: where to find the watering holes, how to socialize, how to read danger, and how to be independent. When male elephants reach their teen years, they eventually leave to join a bachelor herd. They don’t leave because they aren’t loved; they leave because it’s the next natural chapter of their “becoming.”

If you’re preparing to send your teen off to college, you’re in the human version of that chapter. You’ve spent years doing exactly what Swazi did—modeling how to reach for what they need, then stepping back so they can grab it themselves. Eventually, we have to step back even further and trust them to find their own way.

The Elephant-Sized Shift on the Inside

Right now, your life might feel like a whirlwind of college prep checklists, dorm room Pinterest pages, and practicing your “brave face.” But underneath the logistics, you feel those elephant-sized shifts on the inside. Your role as the matriarch is quietly changing.

For years, you’ve taught them where their watering holes are and who their safe people are. You’ve modeled community and shared your family values. Now, they’re stepping into their first real stretch of independent terrain. If this transition feels heavy, even if you’re bursting with pride, please know: this is normal.

Like Swazi, you are figuring out how to take that step back and how it feels to reposition yourself toward the sidelines. Elephants are known for their deep emotional intelligence; they grieve, they gather, and they remember. That ache you feel isn’t weakness. It’s love. It’s proof that your capacity to nurture your emerging adult is real.

Key Takeaways for the Transitioning Mom

As you navigate this season, keep these three reflections tucked in your heart:

1.  Roots Enable Roaming: On the days you feel undone, remember that if your teen weren’t well-rooted, they wouldn’t be brave enough to roam. Their independence is a tribute to your guidance.

2.  Influence Over Access: Your bond isn’t dependent on proximity. Elephants roam miles apart and stay connected through memory and recognition. Your influence doesn’t vanish just because they moved into a dorm; it simply evolves from daily access to deep-seated trust.

3.  The Widening of the Herd:This isn’t an ending; it’s an expansion. You aren’t losing a child; you are watching your family’s “herd” grow larger and more resilient.

Reflection Question: In what area of my teen’s life can I “pull the leaves down” just a little bit lower this week, and then practice the art of stepping back?

Addressing the Elephant in the Room

By the way, Qinisa did get those leaves eventually! Swazi and I stood back with pride, watching her succeed on her own terms.

If you find yourself needing support addressing the elephant in the room the fact that this transition is emotionally challenging and heavy,I would love to support you. 

I am right there in the herd with you, not just as a coach, but as a fellow college mom who understands the bittersweet reality of the “step back.” You don’t have to navigate these shifts alone. Whether you need help managing the anxiety of drop-off or rediscovering your own identity as your teen roams, let’s connect.

Book a connection call here

Diana smiling with black tank top posing in front of pink and orange flowers
About Diana Davidson
Hi! I'm Diana, a parent coach who helps parents navigate the emotional rollercoaster when their kids head off college - something I know firsthand with my UC Berkeley sophomore and high school freshman at home. Parents get plenty of advice about dorm essentials and college tours but little support for their hearts during this massive transition; that's why I'm doing this work. When I'm not coaching parents or running my early childhood music program, you'll find me in search of the perfect taco, dancing Flamenco, or planning my next trip with my husband and our ridiculously cute poodle-mystery, Fozzie.

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