Listen "Midlife Magic: Extraordinary Women Redefining 40+ on Their Terms"
Episode Synopsis
This is your Women Over 40 podcast.What does it really mean to reinvent yourself after 40? For many women, the world tells us that midlife is a time to slow down or settle, but listen closely and you’ll hear a different story—one about bold new beginnings, untapped talents, and the courage to dream bigger than ever.I want to get right into it and talk about some extraordinary women who’ve shattered expectations and pursued new passions well after forty. Take Susan Lister Locke from Nantucket. She’d grown up wanting to be a fashion designer, but only found space to truly chase her creative side after the age of 50. With her marriage behind her and her former career in retail ending, Susan returned to real estate, but this time she also pursued jewelry-making classes—at first as a hobby, later as a thriving business that saw her pieces displayed from an upscale Nantucket shop to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Her advice? She started by listing what actually brought her joy, what she liked and what she wanted to avoid in her next chapter. Reinvention, for her, didn’t mean starting from scratch. It meant looking at old dreams with new eyes and honoring her own passions.If you’re thinking that these stories only belong to women in the arts, think again. Jeanne Rosner, a pediatric anesthesiologist for over twenty years, used a vision board to map her next steps after children. Her journey led her to found SOUL Food Salon, a community-based project that brings nutrition and healthy living education to her neighborhood. Jeanne’s reinvention began with the simple question: what do I want to contribute now, and how do I want to feel while doing it?Sometimes change is born from hardship. Terri Bryant, a renowned makeup artist, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in her 40s. Instead of stepping away from her passion, Terri designed new, ergonomic makeup tools not only to help herself, but to make beauty more accessible for everyone. Her startup, Guide Beauty, now has Selma Blair as Chief Creative Officer, showing how new partnerships and possibilities can bloom from challenges we didn’t choose.For others, loss or life transitions light the spark. Beth Bengtson started Working for Women after a layoff, turning her expertise into an organization that connects business resources to women-centered nonprofits, helping more women become financially independent. She never saw herself as a leader until her network convinced her otherwise—a powerful reminder that sometimes, our strengths are more visible to others than to ourselves.The psychologist Vishakha Shinde shares how, after grief and self-doubt in her 40s, she revived her family’s plant nursery and let her curiosity be her guide. Now she grows decorative houseplants in coconut shells, learns from Japanese Youtube instructors, and empowers herself by learning new business skills. For Vishakha, the 40s became about curiosity and nurturing herself, not simply chasing achievements.It’s clear: Women over 40 are creators, healers, entrepreneurs, and visionaries. Reinvention is about honoring what lights you up and being willing to take small steps outside your comfort zone. This is the season to get curious, to connect, and to embrace the version of yourself you’re becoming.Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. If you enjoyed this episode, don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For more http://www.quietplease.aiGet the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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