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Women Over 40: From Coconut Shells to Corner Offices - Real Stories of Midlife Reinvention
Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
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This is your Women Over 40 podcast.
# Women Over 40: Reinventing Your Life Podcast Episode
Welcome to Women Over 40. I'm so glad you're here because today we're talking about something that challenges everything society tells us about aging. We're exploring reinvention after 40, and I promise you, the stories you're about to hear will change how you think about this chapter of your life.
Let me start with someone named Asha Shinde. At 40, Asha felt trapped. Everyone around her was questioning why she hadn't settled down, why she wasn't following the traditional path society had laid out. But here's what she said that stuck with me: my life needed a reboot on my own terms. So she did something bold. She took over her cousin's abandoned family nursery and started experimenting. She grew small decorative houseplants inside coconut shells. It worked. What started as a quiet exploration became Ashokvatika Nursery, a thriving business. Today, Asha is presenting at business networking events, learning about sensory gardens and artificial intelligence for plant care. She went from feeling uninspired to following curiosity as her compass.
Then there's Rochelle Potkar, an award-winning author and performance poet who made a profound shift in her 40s. She stopped thinking in short-term timeframes and embraced what she calls the journeywoman journey. This longer, winding road relieved her of anxieties she carried in her 30s. She doesn't fret rejections anymore. She's pitching screenplays with genuine confidence. What she discovered is that life doesn't have to feel like a jigsaw puzzle you're desperately trying to complete. It can feel like a patchwork quilt, beautiful in its complexity and composition.
These aren't isolated stories. Consider Vera Wang, who launched her first bridal collection at age 40 with no design background. She had vision and fire in her belly, and now her name is practically synonymous with high-end bridal couture. Or Julia Child, who began studying at Le Cordon Bleu in her 40s and released her first cookbook at 49. When her television show The French Chef premiered, she was already in her 50s.
The data backs this up too. Between 2019 and 2022, nearly 1.8 million women aged 45 and older made career changes in the United States alone. They cited reasons ranging from burnout to newfound passion. What's remarkable is that this reinvention is becoming increasingly common and successful.
Here's what these women share: they stopped chasing the imagined ideal version of themselves. They survived enough to know what really matters. They leveraged the emotional intelligence, confidence, and creativity that actually peak during midlife. Your 40s aren't the beginning of decline. They're your greatest advantage.
If you're listening and thinking about pivoting toward something you've always loved, something that calls to you in that quiet whisper within, this is your permission. Start small. Network. Learn new skills. Test the waters. Your age and experience aren't obstacles. They're your foundation.
Thank you so much for tuning in to Women Over 40. Please subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease 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
# Women Over 40: Reinventing Your Life Podcast Episode
Welcome to Women Over 40. I'm so glad you're here because today we're talking about something that challenges everything society tells us about aging. We're exploring reinvention after 40, and I promise you, the stories you're about to hear will change how you think about this chapter of your life.
Let me start with someone named Asha Shinde. At 40, Asha felt trapped. Everyone around her was questioning why she hadn't settled down, why she wasn't following the traditional path society had laid out. But here's what she said that stuck with me: my life needed a reboot on my own terms. So she did something bold. She took over her cousin's abandoned family nursery and started experimenting. She grew small decorative houseplants inside coconut shells. It worked. What started as a quiet exploration became Ashokvatika Nursery, a thriving business. Today, Asha is presenting at business networking events, learning about sensory gardens and artificial intelligence for plant care. She went from feeling uninspired to following curiosity as her compass.
Then there's Rochelle Potkar, an award-winning author and performance poet who made a profound shift in her 40s. She stopped thinking in short-term timeframes and embraced what she calls the journeywoman journey. This longer, winding road relieved her of anxieties she carried in her 30s. She doesn't fret rejections anymore. She's pitching screenplays with genuine confidence. What she discovered is that life doesn't have to feel like a jigsaw puzzle you're desperately trying to complete. It can feel like a patchwork quilt, beautiful in its complexity and composition.
These aren't isolated stories. Consider Vera Wang, who launched her first bridal collection at age 40 with no design background. She had vision and fire in her belly, and now her name is practically synonymous with high-end bridal couture. Or Julia Child, who began studying at Le Cordon Bleu in her 40s and released her first cookbook at 49. When her television show The French Chef premiered, she was already in her 50s.
The data backs this up too. Between 2019 and 2022, nearly 1.8 million women aged 45 and older made career changes in the United States alone. They cited reasons ranging from burnout to newfound passion. What's remarkable is that this reinvention is becoming increasingly common and successful.
Here's what these women share: they stopped chasing the imagined ideal version of themselves. They survived enough to know what really matters. They leveraged the emotional intelligence, confidence, and creativity that actually peak during midlife. Your 40s aren't the beginning of decline. They're your greatest advantage.
If you're listening and thinking about pivoting toward something you've always loved, something that calls to you in that quiet whisper within, this is your permission. Start small. Network. Learn new skills. Test the waters. Your age and experience aren't obstacles. They're your foundation.
Thank you so much for tuning in to Women Over 40. Please subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease 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