The Midlife Edit

Wanting More Isn't the Problem. Apologizing for It Is.


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This week starts with a mirror. Jen catches her own reflection mid-morning-routine and doesn't recognize the woman looking back - not because she looks older, but because she looks unedited. That moment cracks open two things Jen's been sitting with: why women apologize for wanting more in midlife, and what it means when you stop recognizing yourself.

She names the "guilt tax" that comes with every role - wife, mom, stepmom, employee - and the double standard that lets a 25-year-old be called "driven" for the exact thing that gets a woman in her 40s, 50s, or 60s met with judgment. She gets specific about the particular bullshit stepmoms face when they dare to say it's hard. And she addresses the tension head-on: how does "I want more" square with last week's Edit Room post about editing OUT chasing the goalpost? (Spoiler: both things are true. Receiving and reaching aren't opposites.)

This one traces the guilt back to its root - the eldest daughter conditioning, the quiet training to disappear - and lands on Jen's own permission piece: she's done apologizing for wanting this show to be big.

In this episode:

  • The "guilt tax" on wanting more in every role women carry
  • The double standard between ambition at 25 vs. ambition in midlife
  • Why stepmoms get told "you knew what you signed up for" — and why that's wrong
  • Reconciling "let it be enough" with "I still want more"
  • Where the guilt was actually learned (hint: it's generational)
  • The mirror moment, the editor-in-chief metaphor, and what it means to stop cutting yourself from your own story

This week's question for the Edit Room:
What's the one thing you're done apologizing for, starting right now?

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The Midlife EditBy Jen Weinstein