There’s a question I keep coming back to: why does it take us so long to finally understand how to live?
Maybe it’s because real understanding can’t be rushed. It has to be earned — through the mistakes we make, the pain we carry quietly, and the regrets that never quite get written down. For so many of us, midlife isn’t a crisis. It’s a reckoning. A moment where we finally stop running from the damage we’ve done and start making peace with it.
I was recently invited by Transform Reads to share my story — and it’s not a tidy one.
It spans redundancy and reinvention. Marriage and divorce. A career pulled apart and slowly rebuilt into something I actually chose. It’s a story about searching for purpose when the map you’d been following suddenly stops making sense. About the financial insecurity that comes with starting over, the trade-offs that keep you up at night — and the unshakeable feeling, even in the hardest moments, that it would all come together. Because nothing replaces joy. Nothing replaces feeling like yourself.
I’m sharing it now because I think it matters now. So much of midlife is caught between two forces: the pull toward transformation and the weight of doubt and stagnation. Most people I meet are sitting somewhere in that gap, not quite sure which way to move.
Without doing a spoiler, READ HERE
What I’ve learned from my own reinvention has shaped everything I do. I now create courses, programmes, and retreatsdesigned to help people find their footing again — to map a new direction when the old one no longer fits.
So I’ll ask you what I ask everyone:
Where is your midlife gap?