This is your Women Over 40 podcast.
Welcome to Women Over 40. Let’s get right to it: today is all about reinventing yourself after 40 and pursuing new passions, not someday, but starting now.
If you’re listening and thinking, “Is it too late for me?” I want you to picture Vera Wang. She didn’t become the icon of bridal fashion until she launched her first bridal collection at 40, after years as a figure skater and Vogue editor. According to multiple interviews she’s given, being passed over for a promotion was the push that made her create something of her own. That wasn’t a consolation prize. That was her next, truer chapter.
Think about Julia Child. She worked in government jobs, moved around the world with her husband, and did not become the Julia we know until her late 40s and 50s. She studied at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris in midlife, released Mastering the Art of French Cooking at 49, and became a television legend after 50. Her story is proof that curiosity plus consistency can rewrite your life at any age.
And it’s not just famous names. LinkedIn reported in a 2022 survey that more than half of workers over 40 had seriously considered a career change to gain more purpose. AARP has found that women between 40 and 65 are especially likely to seek more meaningful work. Reinvention after 40 is not an exception anymore. It’s a movement.
So, how does this become your story, not just someone else’s?
First, pay attention to the itch. That quiet voice that says, “I want something different.” Maybe you dream of starting a consultancy, launching a pottery studio, coaching women through health changes, or going back to school like so many women who have become health coaches, designers, or therapists in their 40s, 50s, and 60s. That desire is data. It’s pointing toward your next passion.
Next, take inventory. Ask yourself: What do people already come to me for? Advice? Design? Organizing? Teaching? Your new passion often hides inside what feels “natural” to you. Grab a notebook and write down what energizes you, what you lose track of time doing, and what you’re curious enough to learn about for hours.
Then, give yourself permission to be a beginner again. That may mean signing up for a community college class in digital marketing, an online course in nutrition, or a writing workshop. Platforms like Coursera and similar sites are filled with women over 40 quietly building new skills at their kitchen tables after the kids go to bed.
Start small and visible. Offer a free workshop at your local library. Post your art on Instagram with your real name. Volunteer your skills for a cause you care about. Small experiments lower the stakes and build confidence. Each tiny action is a vote for your new identity.
And recognize this: your age is an asset, not a liability. By 40, you’ve negotiated bedtimes, bosses, breakups, maybe divorces, layoffs, health scares. That means you have resilience, boundaries, and a built-in BS detector. Investors and clients increasingly seek purpose-driven, values-led businesses, and research on entrepreneurship shows that founders over 40 often outperform younger ones because of experience and clarity.
So here’s your outline for reinvention, woven right into your day: notice the itch, name your passion, learn one new skill, run one small experiment, and repeat. Let it be imperfect, messy, and real.
Thank you for tuning in to Women Over 40. If this episode sparked something in you, make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss what’s coming next.
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