Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Women Over 40: The Freedom Phase - Why Your Second Act Might Be Your Best One Yet
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description
This is your Women Over 40 podcast.
Welcome to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the second acts that change everything. I'm your host, and today we're talking about reinvention, that beautiful, terrifying, absolutely necessary journey that happens when you decide it's time to become who you've always wanted to be.
Let me start with something that might surprise you. Between 2019 and 2022, nearly 1.8 million women aged 45 and older made career changes in the United States alone. That's not a trend, listeners. That's a movement. And the reasons are as varied as we are: burnout, newfound passion, or simply the realization that life's too short to spend it doing something that doesn't feed your soul.
Think about Vera Wang. Before she became synonymous with luxurious bridal couture, she was a figure skater and then a fashion editor at Vogue for 15 years. When she was passed over for the editor-in-chief position in her early 40s, something shifted. Instead of accepting that setback as her final chapter, she launched her first bridal collection at age 40. Today, her name is practically interchangeable with high-end bridal fashion, and she continues to thrive in her 70s.
Or consider Julia Child, who didn't fall in love with cooking until her 40s. She began studying at Le Cordon Bleu and didn't publish her first cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, until she was 49. When The French Chef premiered in 1963, she was already in her 50s. She proved that we're never too old to start from scratch.
What these women understood, and what listeners like you are discovering every single day, is that your 40s aren't the beginning of the end. They're the beginning of something entirely new. According to research on midlife reinvention, women in their 40s and beyond often experience what psychologists call the freedom phase. After years of chasing who we thought we should be, we finally start living as who we actually are.
One woman shared her journey beautifully: after working as a costume design assistant in Mumbai, she felt her curiosity extinguished by people questioning why she hadn't settled down by 40. But instead of accepting that narrative, she decided to rebuild her family's nearly abandoned nursery business, called Ashokvatika Nursery. She started small, experimenting with decorative houseplants in coconut shells, watching YouTube tutorials on plant care, and eventually joined a business networking collective where she found her tribe. Today, she's educating herself on everything from sensory gardens to using AI to improve plant care.
The common thread in every reinvention story is this: they all started with curiosity. They all embraced their actual selves instead of their imagined ones. They all gave themselves permission to explore without the pressure of immediate success.
If you're listening and thinking about your own reinvention, start by assessing your genuine strengths and passions. Network intentionally with people who inspire you. Invest in learning new skills through platforms like Coursera or LinkedIn Learning. And remember, you don't have to leap headfirst. Start small, test the waters, and let your experiences and wisdom guide you toward what's calling you.
Your greatest success might be waiting on the other side of 40. Listeners, thank you so much for tuning in to Women Over 40. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode of real stories from real women reinventing their lives. 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
Welcome to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the second acts that change everything. I'm your host, and today we're talking about reinvention, that beautiful, terrifying, absolutely necessary journey that happens when you decide it's time to become who you've always wanted to be.
Let me start with something that might surprise you. Between 2019 and 2022, nearly 1.8 million women aged 45 and older made career changes in the United States alone. That's not a trend, listeners. That's a movement. And the reasons are as varied as we are: burnout, newfound passion, or simply the realization that life's too short to spend it doing something that doesn't feed your soul.
Think about Vera Wang. Before she became synonymous with luxurious bridal couture, she was a figure skater and then a fashion editor at Vogue for 15 years. When she was passed over for the editor-in-chief position in her early 40s, something shifted. Instead of accepting that setback as her final chapter, she launched her first bridal collection at age 40. Today, her name is practically interchangeable with high-end bridal fashion, and she continues to thrive in her 70s.
Or consider Julia Child, who didn't fall in love with cooking until her 40s. She began studying at Le Cordon Bleu and didn't publish her first cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, until she was 49. When The French Chef premiered in 1963, she was already in her 50s. She proved that we're never too old to start from scratch.
What these women understood, and what listeners like you are discovering every single day, is that your 40s aren't the beginning of the end. They're the beginning of something entirely new. According to research on midlife reinvention, women in their 40s and beyond often experience what psychologists call the freedom phase. After years of chasing who we thought we should be, we finally start living as who we actually are.
One woman shared her journey beautifully: after working as a costume design assistant in Mumbai, she felt her curiosity extinguished by people questioning why she hadn't settled down by 40. But instead of accepting that narrative, she decided to rebuild her family's nearly abandoned nursery business, called Ashokvatika Nursery. She started small, experimenting with decorative houseplants in coconut shells, watching YouTube tutorials on plant care, and eventually joined a business networking collective where she found her tribe. Today, she's educating herself on everything from sensory gardens to using AI to improve plant care.
The common thread in every reinvention story is this: they all started with curiosity. They all embraced their actual selves instead of their imagined ones. They all gave themselves permission to explore without the pressure of immediate success.
If you're listening and thinking about your own reinvention, start by assessing your genuine strengths and passions. Network intentionally with people who inspire you. Invest in learning new skills through platforms like Coursera or LinkedIn Learning. And remember, you don't have to leap headfirst. Start small, test the waters, and let your experiences and wisdom guide you toward what's calling you.
Your greatest success might be waiting on the other side of 40. Listeners, thank you so much for tuning in to Women Over 40. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode of real stories from real women reinventing their lives. 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