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Reinvention After 40: Embracing Your Next Chapter's Passion
Published 4 months, 1 week ago
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This is your Women Over 40 podcast.
Welcome to Women Over 40. Today, we're diving straight into a topic that’s both deeply personal and powerfully universal: reinventing yourself after forty and discovering new passions you may never have imagined.
Reinvention in our forties isn’t about erasing everything that came before—it’s about drawing on every lesson, every heartbreak, every success, and every quirk that makes us, well, us. Let’s look at some incredible women who did just that, and what their journeys teach us about the power of possibility.
Vera Wang became a global fashion icon, but did you know she only entered the bridal fashion industry at forty? She’d already built a respected career in figure skating and the magazine world, but her true calling only revealed itself much later. Then there’s bestselling author Toni Morrison, who wrote her first novel, “The Bluest Eye,” at 40 and went on to win a Nobel Prize. Ariana Huffington didn’t launch The Huffington Post until she was 55. These stories are reminders that age is just the start of a chapter, not the final page.
But it’s not just celebrities leading the charge. Susan Lister Locke spent years in retail, twisting through family business and the uncertain territory of divorce before allowing her creative side to step forward. What began with jewelry-making classes for fun became a thriving business, with her pieces featured in luxury shops and even Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. As she put it, reinvention started with simply asking: What do I like? What do I need? And then daring to chase the answers.
Sometimes, change comes from necessity. Terri Bryant was at the top of the makeup artistry world when Parkinson’s disease altered her path. Instead of stepping back, she harnessed all her expertise to create Guide Beauty—products designed for people of all abilities, with none other than Selma Blair as her Chief Creative Officer. Terri’s story isn’t just about adapting to loss; it’s about turning limitation into innovation.
There are quieter revolutions too—like Vishakha Shinde from Raigad, India, who left the expectations of her conservative hometown to pursue independence in Mumbai. In her forties, after years of burnout, she decided to restore her family’s neglected nursery. With patience and trial, her passion grew into a creative business called Ashokvatika Nursery, and now her forties are about nurturing herself as she nurtures her plants.
Sometimes reinvention is as dramatic as career pivots, and sometimes it’s about integrating the parts of yourself that lay dormant—like pediatric anesthesiologist Jeanne Rosner using vision boards to launch SOUL Food Salon, or corporate leader Beth Bengtson finding her mission helping women reach economic independence with Working for Women.
So, what can you take home today? Reinvention means listening for the quiet twitch of curiosity, having the courage to make lists of what really matters to you, being open to learning at any age, and finding the grit to step outside comfort zones.
If you’re a woman over 40, your story is waiting to expand. Whether you're fueled by necessity, curiosity, or even heartbreak—reinvention is your right. And maybe your greatest passion is just ahead.
Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Welcome to Women Over 40. Today, we're diving straight into a topic that’s both deeply personal and powerfully universal: reinventing yourself after forty and discovering new passions you may never have imagined.
Reinvention in our forties isn’t about erasing everything that came before—it’s about drawing on every lesson, every heartbreak, every success, and every quirk that makes us, well, us. Let’s look at some incredible women who did just that, and what their journeys teach us about the power of possibility.
Vera Wang became a global fashion icon, but did you know she only entered the bridal fashion industry at forty? She’d already built a respected career in figure skating and the magazine world, but her true calling only revealed itself much later. Then there’s bestselling author Toni Morrison, who wrote her first novel, “The Bluest Eye,” at 40 and went on to win a Nobel Prize. Ariana Huffington didn’t launch The Huffington Post until she was 55. These stories are reminders that age is just the start of a chapter, not the final page.
But it’s not just celebrities leading the charge. Susan Lister Locke spent years in retail, twisting through family business and the uncertain territory of divorce before allowing her creative side to step forward. What began with jewelry-making classes for fun became a thriving business, with her pieces featured in luxury shops and even Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. As she put it, reinvention started with simply asking: What do I like? What do I need? And then daring to chase the answers.
Sometimes, change comes from necessity. Terri Bryant was at the top of the makeup artistry world when Parkinson’s disease altered her path. Instead of stepping back, she harnessed all her expertise to create Guide Beauty—products designed for people of all abilities, with none other than Selma Blair as her Chief Creative Officer. Terri’s story isn’t just about adapting to loss; it’s about turning limitation into innovation.
There are quieter revolutions too—like Vishakha Shinde from Raigad, India, who left the expectations of her conservative hometown to pursue independence in Mumbai. In her forties, after years of burnout, she decided to restore her family’s neglected nursery. With patience and trial, her passion grew into a creative business called Ashokvatika Nursery, and now her forties are about nurturing herself as she nurtures her plants.
Sometimes reinvention is as dramatic as career pivots, and sometimes it’s about integrating the parts of yourself that lay dormant—like pediatric anesthesiologist Jeanne Rosner using vision boards to launch SOUL Food Salon, or corporate leader Beth Bengtson finding her mission helping women reach economic independence with Working for Women.
So, what can you take home today? Reinvention means listening for the quiet twitch of curiosity, having the courage to make lists of what really matters to you, being open to learning at any age, and finding the grit to step outside comfort zones.
If you’re a woman over 40, your story is waiting to expand. Whether you're fueled by necessity, curiosity, or even heartbreak—reinvention is your right. And maybe your greatest passion is just ahead.
Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI