Women Over 40

Igniting Your Next Chapter: Midlife Reinvention Stories


Listen Later

This is your Women Over 40 podcast.

Welcome to Women Over 40. If you’re tuning in today, there’s a good chance you’ve felt that shifting urge—the sense that it’s time to reinvent, time to finally let a dormant passion rise to the surface. Maybe you’re staring forty or fifty or even sixty in the eye thinking: “Is this really it?” Or maybe you’re craving more fulfillment, creativity, and adventure.

Let’s cut right to it: you’re not alone, and you are standing at the perfect crossroads for reinvention. Women everywhere are rewriting what it means to age, and some of the most inspiring examples start after forty. Take Susan Lister Locke from Rhode Island—after years in retail, a divorce, and the closing of her workplace, she made lists of what she loved and carved out a path both in real estate and jewelry-making. What started as a fun escape bloomed into selling her work in Nantucket boutiques and even Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts.

But reinvention doesn’t just mean jumping into something new for the sake of it—it means getting crystal clear about what you want. According to LoveQuest Coaching’s Lisa Concepcion, you need to ask yourself not just what you can do, but what lights you up. Lisa herself hit rock bottom after a divorce at 44, stuck and disconnected, until she started challenging her own comfort zones. Getting uncomfortable was no accident: she learned that reaching for the extraordinary means pushing past autopilot. Through daily introspection and surrounding herself with growth-minded allies, she found a sense of peace and excitement about the future that she hadn’t known before.

Let’s talk about facing life’s curveballs. Terri Bryant spent 25 years as a makeup artist before she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s. Instead of letting this stop her, she created Guide Beauty, a makeup tools company designed for people with limited dexterity, and even brought on actress Selma Blair as her Chief Creative Officer. By embracing her diagnosis, she unlocked a kind of transformation only possible by fully facing the truth and blending passion with purpose.

It’s not always a dramatic career pivot either. Sometimes life pushes you out of the nest—like for Beth Bengtson, who after being laid off, finally channeled her skills toward building Working for Women, an organization connecting women’s charities with businesses seeking to give back. Her story proves that sometimes reinvention is about taking your unique experience and aiming it at a need you passionately want to fill.

Here’s what these stories have in common: clarity, courage, and turning discomfort into opportunity. Toni Morrison wrote her first novel at 40. Vera Wang became a fashion designer at 40. Arianna Huffington launched The Huffington Post at 55. Every story is rooted in the same belief—reinvention is not only possible, it is powerful.

So if something inside you is stirring, pay attention. Surround yourself with others who are evolving, take small steps, and give yourself permission to pursue the things you truly love.

Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. If this episode resonated with you, don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a story like yours. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Women Over 40By Inception Point Ai