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Midlife Reinvention: From Corner Offices to Culinary Dreams and Vermont Sunsets
Published 1 month ago
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This is your Women Over 40 podcast.
Welcome back to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the power of midlife reinvention. I'm your host, and today we're diving into pursuing new passions after 40—because it's not just possible, it's your time to shine.
Imagine this: You're Alyson Chalnick, 52, staring down a hectic life in New Jersey. Your husband's commute to New York City is draining the family, and you crave fresh air. You and Andrew buy a vacation home in Vermont, loving hikes, kayaks, and snowboards. Three years later, with kids on board and his job flexible, you sell everything and move. Friends are shocked, but now Andrew exercises daily, kids play outside instead of glued to screens, and you're surrounded by endless sunsets and yoga classes. No regrets—just pure joy.
Or picture Teri Tyson at 56, a vice president at AIG during the 2008 financial crisis. She sticks it out to repay the bailout, then quits. Two weeks later, she's at the Institute of Culinary Education in New York City. A year on, she opens her own restaurant. Friends call her nuts for ditching global travel for cooking, but her passion for it fuels her. As a single mom, she timed it right when her daughters were independent. Her advice? Think it through, visualize the daily grind. She never looked back.
Then there's Renee Salem, 48, a stay-at-home mom of three, unhappy in her marriage. She divorces, moves to New York City with her son, and lands a dream job planning events for Broadway shows—her lifelong love. No prior experience, just hard work and presence. Her daughter dreams of an art gallery; Renee says, Look at me—you can do it too.
These stories echo Diane Gilman, who at 60 invented middle-aged jeans for changing bodies after menopause. A rock and roll girl refusing to go frumpy, she sewed one pair for herself, then took it to QVC. Phone lines burned; it sold out in an hour. Her breakthrough came late, marrying talent to heart, proving success peaks when you let go of timelines.
And Marlena from Makeup Geek Cosmetics? At 45, post-COVID, she lost her multimillion-dollar brand and had a baby. Humbling, yes—but she's rebuilding, dressing for confidence now, not waiting for perfection.
Listeners, after 40, wisdom trumps youth. Studies show women's self-esteem soars in their 60s and 70s as we ditch expectations. Menopause shocks, careers shift, but new dreams demand bold strategies. Don't let doubt stop you. Picture your passion: writing like Nancy Serling, who at 45 finished her novel Good Neighbors after years at The Writer's Studio, enduring rejections until publication in 2018. Failures? They build resilience.
Start small: Journal your fire, take that class, uproot if it calls. You're not starting over—you're leveling up. Society's timelines? Ignore them. Search for the woman you've always dreamed of being. You've got the experience; now claim the passion.
Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. Subscribe now for more empowerment, and remember: your best chapter is unfolding.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.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 back to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the power of midlife reinvention. I'm your host, and today we're diving into pursuing new passions after 40—because it's not just possible, it's your time to shine.
Imagine this: You're Alyson Chalnick, 52, staring down a hectic life in New Jersey. Your husband's commute to New York City is draining the family, and you crave fresh air. You and Andrew buy a vacation home in Vermont, loving hikes, kayaks, and snowboards. Three years later, with kids on board and his job flexible, you sell everything and move. Friends are shocked, but now Andrew exercises daily, kids play outside instead of glued to screens, and you're surrounded by endless sunsets and yoga classes. No regrets—just pure joy.
Or picture Teri Tyson at 56, a vice president at AIG during the 2008 financial crisis. She sticks it out to repay the bailout, then quits. Two weeks later, she's at the Institute of Culinary Education in New York City. A year on, she opens her own restaurant. Friends call her nuts for ditching global travel for cooking, but her passion for it fuels her. As a single mom, she timed it right when her daughters were independent. Her advice? Think it through, visualize the daily grind. She never looked back.
Then there's Renee Salem, 48, a stay-at-home mom of three, unhappy in her marriage. She divorces, moves to New York City with her son, and lands a dream job planning events for Broadway shows—her lifelong love. No prior experience, just hard work and presence. Her daughter dreams of an art gallery; Renee says, Look at me—you can do it too.
These stories echo Diane Gilman, who at 60 invented middle-aged jeans for changing bodies after menopause. A rock and roll girl refusing to go frumpy, she sewed one pair for herself, then took it to QVC. Phone lines burned; it sold out in an hour. Her breakthrough came late, marrying talent to heart, proving success peaks when you let go of timelines.
And Marlena from Makeup Geek Cosmetics? At 45, post-COVID, she lost her multimillion-dollar brand and had a baby. Humbling, yes—but she's rebuilding, dressing for confidence now, not waiting for perfection.
Listeners, after 40, wisdom trumps youth. Studies show women's self-esteem soars in their 60s and 70s as we ditch expectations. Menopause shocks, careers shift, but new dreams demand bold strategies. Don't let doubt stop you. Picture your passion: writing like Nancy Serling, who at 45 finished her novel Good Neighbors after years at The Writer's Studio, enduring rejections until publication in 2018. Failures? They build resilience.
Start small: Journal your fire, take that class, uproot if it calls. You're not starting over—you're leveling up. Society's timelines? Ignore them. Search for the woman you've always dreamed of being. You've got the experience; now claim the passion.
Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. Subscribe now for more empowerment, and remember: your best chapter is unfolding.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.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