What happens when you spend almost year digging into your past through conversations with GenXers about aging, purpose, identity, and the strangeness of midlife? If you’re me, you find a path to curing your own midlife crisis.
In this short Season 1 finale, I share what creating Gen X Crisis has actually done to me - how a podcast I started in Paris at 54, in the thick of disorientation and loneliness, became the very thing that pulled me out of it.
I talk about reconnecting with old friends I hadn’t spoken to in decades, the surprising emotional depth of those conversations, and the recurring reminder (mostly from the women!) that maybe this isn’t a crisis at all… maybe it’s a reinvention.
I reflect on the big themes that emerged across the season:
• The psychedelic trip of being in your 50s in a world you barely recognize
• The trap of nostalgia and how quickly you can start feeling old
• The Gen X playbook we inherited - especially around not self-promoting, keeping your head down, and how that shapes our lives today
• The physical side of aging, and how much it impacts our mental state
• The power of staying connected when your instinct is to isolate
• Why reinvention is not optional - and might actually be the best part of midlife
I also share what I learned from hosting my first Gen Z guest, my stepson Felix, and why Season 2 will expand beyond Gen X, bringing in Gen Z, Millennials, and Boomers to round out the conversation.
This finale is a thank you, a reset, and a look forward. I talk about the guests who changed me, the friendships I wish I’d kept up, the community I want to build (especially for Gen X men who struggle to talk about this stuff), and why I’m more hopeful now than I’ve been in years.
Season 1 was about getting out of my crisis. Season 2 is about what comes next.
Thanks for being part of this.
See you in January.
Visit www.genxcrisis.com to subscribe and get updates on Season 2.
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