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Reigniting Your Spark: Midlife Reinvention Stories to Inspire Your Next Chapter

Reigniting Your Spark: Midlife Reinvention Stories to Inspire Your Next Chapter

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is your Women Over 40 podcast.

Welcome to Women Over 40. Reinventing yourself after 40 isn’t just possible, it might be the most empowering move you ever make. No matter your background or what you’ve spent your life doing, turning 40 isn’t some invisible finish line—it’s a launch pad.

Think of Susan Lister Locke, who after decades in retail and raising her family, approached 50 with both a question and a mission: what truly lights me up? In her case, lists about her talents and wants led her to jewelry-making, blending creativity and entrepreneurship. Now her work features in upscale shops on Nantucket and even in Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. By tuning in to what she loved—not just what paid the bills—Susan transformed not only her career but her sense of self.

It’s not just about careers, though. Keri Ford was propelled by health changes at 40, reclaiming wellness after breast explant surgery, and found new passions that built a thriving business helping other women do the same. She was inspired by late bloomers like Toni Morrison, who wrote her first novel at 40, and Vera Wang, who pivoted from journalism and sports to iconic fashion design after 40. These women show reinvention is never tied to youth—it’s tied to vision and the courage to choose yourself.

Diane Bruno built a career in public relations but found herself craving impact after a personal loss. Interacting with the funeral director at her mother's service stirred her, and she bravely transitioned into funeral services to help people through the hardest moments of their lives. Diane’s story is not just about taking a new job, it’s about seeking fulfillment and meaning, guided by a willingness to explore what felt truly purposeful.

Terri Bryant, a makeup artist and educator for over 25 years, faced Parkinson’s Disease and reinvented not by stepping back, but by innovating. She founded Guide Beauty, creating ergonomic makeup tools that empower anyone—especially those with strength or movement challenges—to experience beauty on their own terms. She credits her reinvention to full acceptance, saying only when she embraced her diagnosis could she unlock new creative energy and possibility.

So, what does reinvention look like for you? It starts with clarity. Get uncomfortably honest about what you want. Maybe you’re feeling stuck—the good news is, that’s almost always the catalyst for change. Vision is everything. Write down what excites you, what you’re absolutely done with, and where your curiosity pulls you. According to LoveQuest Coaching, living the life you desire starts now, not when you have all the answers. It means getting comfortable with discomfort—a sign that you’re stretching instead of staying safely stuck.

Connect with women who’ve taken these leaps—community fuels momentum. Work with coaches, join groups, or simply start by absorbing stories and immersing yourself in growth. As Beth Bengtson, founder of Working for Women, learned after corporate layoffs, sometimes the backdoor ends up being the front entrance to your truest self.

Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. Reinvention isn’t for someone else—it’s for you, right now. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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