The Midlife Tea

Starting Over in Midlife: Reinventing Yourself & Finding Purpose After 40

The Midlife Tea Season 1 Episode 1

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0:00 | 18:53

Welcome to the very first episode of The Midlife Tea, a podcast about real conversations, life transitions, and discovering new purpose in midlife.

In this episode, Manel and Tina talk about something many people experience but rarely say out loud — the feeling of starting over in midlife.

For many people, life after 40 brings unexpected changes. Careers shift. Children grow up. Relationships evolve. Priorities change. And suddenly we begin asking deeper questions about who we are and what we want next.

Midlife can feel uncertain, but it can also be one of the most powerful periods of personal growth and reinvention.

In this conversation, we explore why so many people feel lost during this stage of life and how midlife can actually become the beginning of a meaningful new chapter.

If you’ve ever felt like you're standing at a crossroads wondering what comes next, this episode is for you.

Midlife isn’t the end of the story.
 For many people, it’s where the real story begins.

☕ What We Talk About in This Episode

• Why so many people experience major life shifts after 40
 • The emotional reality of starting over in midlife
 • How life experience becomes your greatest advantage
 • Why reinvention is more common than people realize
 • Letting go of the pressure to have everything figured out
 • The power of personal growth and self-discovery in midlife

🌱 Topics Discussed

Midlife reinvention
 Starting over after 40
 Personal growth in midlife
 Life transitions
 Purpose and identity in midlife
 Self-discovery
 Navigating change

💡 What You’ll Take Away

After listening to this episode you’ll understand:

• Why feeling uncertain in midlife is actually normal
 • How many people reinvent their lives after 40
 • Why midlife can be the beginning of your most powerful chapter

🎙 About The Midlife Tea

The Midlife Tea is a podcast hosted by Manel and Tina, where we have honest conversations about midlife, personal growth, reinvention, relationships, health, and the realities of life after 40.

This is a space where we talk openly about the things many people are thinking but few are discussing.

📣 Join the Conversation

If this episode resonated with you, share it with someone navigating their own midlife journey.

Follow The Midlife Tea for new episodes and conversations about life after 40, starting over, and creating a meaningful next chapter.

Support the show

Not everyone is meant to come with you into this version of your life.
And that’s not failure… that’s growth.

Tina

We are two longtime friends who are sitting down to have an honest conversation about what it's like to be in midlife. From identity shifts to relationships, reinvention, and everything in between. We'll be sharing our own stories and also talking to inspiring guests who inspire us to share this chapter fully. So grab a cup of whatever you love and join us. Hi friends, I'm Tina.

Manel

I'm Manel, and welcome to The Midlife Tee. This is our very first podcast, and we're so excited you're here to join us. Today we're going to be talking about when we realized we were in midlife and what a great gift that's ended up to be. So, Tina, tell me, when did you realize you were in midlife?

Tina

For me, it was when my children left home. And it was just so quiet in the house. I was a stay-at-home mum. And it wasn't just a physical silence, it was a real emotional silence as well. And that's when it really hit me that this is a new stage that I was coming into. And also when I was um having conversations with girlfriends, I noticed that our conversations were changing. The topics were changing. We were starting to talk about hormones and aches and pains, so many aches and pains we were all having. We were talking about, you know, how to support our adult children, at the same time trying to support our aging parents, you know, the sandwich generation, as they they call us. And also relationship changes, you know, as we get older, our relationship changes.

Manel

Yeah, um, I think for me, it was when we dropped off my youngest daughter. I have four girls, and we with the excitement of the leading up to, you know, going off to school. I I had been dreading, you know, she's sort of like my little best friend and everything like that, but it's just nothing really kind of like anything major. We dropped her off, we come back that weekend. Everybody else, her older sisters, everybody went to their, you know, back to their jobs and and schools, and and I felt alone. My husband had travels for work, so he had flown off, and I was in deafening silence at home. There was nobody there except the dog and myself and an empty house, and me in my head going, Where am I going to go now? What am I gonna do? What now? Where did I end as a mother? And for me, it was a feeling like that my job had ended, like somebody just fired me, basically.

Tina

Right.

Manel

I woke up one day and after almost 30 years, you're fired, you're done, you're not needed anymore. How am I gonna start?

Tina

Right. Was that a specific moment for you? Is there a moment, a day, a time, anything?

Manel

It was that that particular weekend. I don't know why, it just keeps coming back to me. That weekend, it's just that that deafening silence, like you said, it was just like I am alone and I have nobody. Obviously, you know, I have friends, I have family, I have my children, my husband. It's just you, you it's in retrospect, like you go in and you dig inside yourself and you're saying, I have never thought of this day and I did not prepare for it. That was basically what I thought. I did not prepare for this day. What do I do now? How do I move on? How do I start? Who am I? Right. I don't know who I am. I was 20-something when I got married, I had children, I left a career to be a stay-at-home mom, and I did everything, you know, taking them out to their sports, driving them to schools, driving them to events, play dates, and it was just always on the go. And then stop. That was it.

Tina

Yeah, and that's a deafening silence too, isn't it? I know I remember for what for me it was waking up one morning after my youngest had gone off to college, and I realized I didn't have anything to do. And I had been so heavily scheduled for 20 years. Morning to night, like you said, with kids' sports and drop-offs at school and pickups and you know, even my weekends, we were always traveling for sports. So that was when it really hit me as well. And like you said, I I knew who Tina was at 20, and all the interests and things that I love to do. I knew who Tina was as a mom. I knew who Tina was as a wife. But suddenly I got to the stage and the house was empty and I didn't know who I was anymore. Who's Tina in her 50s? What do I even enjoy doing anymore? The things I enjoy now are very different to the things I enjoyed in my 20s when I didn't have children. Uh so that was a real awakening for me, is I have to really figure out what I want going forward in the next chapter. You know, um, I didn't want to settle. I didn't want it to just to be hum ha for the rest of my life. I had to figure out do I want to work, you know, do I want to start a business? Um, am I happy just being at home and doing nothing? You know, I had to to really look inward and think about what I wanted next.

Manel

So you were reflecting on your like yourself as a younger person, but not looking at yourself at the at the present time right now. So what was the first action that you decided to take?

Tina

So the first action I took is I used to love acting when I was young. And it was in all the school plays, all the school musicals. And it was something I always wanted to do. And then, you know, life happens. I got married, I had children, and and what I wanted to do was sort of put on the back burner. So when I went through this awakening, as we'll call it, and really realized that I needed to make changes in my life. Um, if I didn't want to just settle, I had to think about, well, what did I what do I enjoy? What did I used to enjoy? Maybe do I still enjoy that? So one of the things was acting for me. So I I called a girlfriend and her son is an actor, and I said, where do I start? And she's like, start with an acting class. And she gave me a couple of uh schools. So I signed up, and so every week I get on the train by myself and I go to the city and I do an acting class. And it was fabulous because going in, I thought, oh, it's gonna be all these 20-year-olds, these fabulous, talented 20-year-olds, and I'm gonna sort of be the old lady in the back, they're all chuckling at. So I was very, very nervous. Um, and it is such a diverse group of people, with everyone having different reasonings for being in this class and and such different ages and different nationalities. And so it was fabulous because everything I feared and was worried about going in didn't happen, you know, and that was a big thing for me.

Manel

And had you stuck with that fear, you would have never taken that first step, too.

Tina

Exactly. And it was amazing how many people, when I said I was going to do it, said, couldn't believe I was doing it alone. I had come to the city and doing it alone. I'm like, yes. Shocked. Yes, it's all about me. Or trying.

Manel

It's like I like I say baby steps, baby steps, baby steps, but it is something that I did for myself and I thoroughly, thoroughly really enjoyed um just the the process of just getting out there and seeing what I can do. I still can do a lot, you know? Right. It is exciting. It is exciting.

Tina

What felt the heaviest for you? Like when you were thinking about, okay, I'm gonna go and do this. Was there anything that was sort of holding you down? Um the fact that I might fail.

Manel

Um and I think that was the the that was the hesitant moment. And when I realized that, okay, so I fail, and I could just move on to something else. I could try. But if I don't try, in my mind, I'm gonna keep thinking, what if? What if I had done that? I would have been at a different place, at a different level. So I think that the once I got over the fear of failure, I think that's the biggest deterrent for most people is that fear of like not making it or doing it. But I think it's actually it's a gift because if you fail, you just keep trying. Something else is just it's sort of like a it's like a an exciting mission that I'm gonna prove to myself that I am worthy. I can do this. Like, what about you? Like, did you were you afraid?

Tina

Definitely. For me, it was um fear of failure, you know, fear of rejection. And also it was, you know, I I didn't know where to start. That was the big thing for me. It's it's taking the time to really learn where you want to start and how do you start. Yes. And that was a huge thing for me, like really taking the time to think about what do I want? What what interests me? I'd I'd forgotten a lot of those things. And my interests now too are very different to when I was 20.

Manel

Yes, definitely.

Tina

You know, so it was number one, it was figuring that out. Number two, then figuring out how I was going to do those things and take the steps and to do them confidently, without without being scared, without being, you know, uh feeling I was going to fail or you know, fear of rejection.

Manel

I think it's it's uh natural to be afraid and but it's just the initial step, right? Just to be able to take that first step. I think it's just it doesn't come overnight. I mean, uh we're still in the process of just learning, but I think it's just that initial step that you need to take the start.

Tina

And I think the nice thing for us at this age is that compared to women who are younger, is that we have the freedom and the confidence. Yes. We're not starting careers, we don't have young children around our feet the whole time, you know, every minute of the day wanting mom. So the nice thing is compared to the younger woman, when I I find I am so much more confident, I don't care anymore. No, not at all. That's the biggest thing. I don't care what people think anymore. I really cared when I was 20. Yes. And you do. That's the a wonderful gift that you get at the midlife, is that you do, you gain the confidence and you don't care as much, you know, what people think. And I think that's so wonderful that we have this at this age compared to the younger woman.

Manel

I I think it's at this stage, it's we feel like we can do anything. We can do anything, because like you said, that we have that freedom. We don't have the uh the obligations are less. It's not like we don't have our children, we still have our children, we have our family, we have our our homes, but the obligations on us are less. I mean, anybody, whether you have children or not, if you're married, that's your your your husband's your first child anyway. But the obligations that's what I say, but your obligations are less, so you have more time to reflect on yourself, and in reflecting, you at this stage of life, you reinvent yourself. Yes, it's a reinvention, it's almost like adolescence again, isn't it? It's a discovery, yeah, it's like rediscovering who you were in this person, you're like, wow, I didn't even know that person was either still in there or that person exists, even.

Tina

Right. Isn't that exciting? Yeah, it is.

Manel

I think it really is.

Tina

It's definitely the gift of midlife, you know.

Manel

It's a confidence, too.

Tina

Yeah.

Manel

So if somebody out there is listening and they're just starting or realizing they're in midlife or they don't know they're in midlife, what do you suggest? So what how should they start the first steps and what should they ask themselves?

Tina

I think the first thing is realizing that you're not going to change your life in a week.

Manel

Right.

Tina

And not to put that pressure on yourself, to to take the time to really think about who you are, where you are, and what you want. So there's a few questions I know that I ask myself. Uh, number one is where am I settling? What in life am I settling for? Exactly. Number two, what do I want more of?

Manel

Something is good.

Tina

You want to keep it going. Yes. What do I want more of? Number three, and this was a big one, what drains me? And really taking the time to think about what is holding me down, whether it be physical or emotional, what is holding me down and holding me back?

Manel

Yes, that's important.

Tina

Right. Definitely. And number four, this was the biggest one for me. If I wasn't afraid, what would I try? And I think, you know, for me, I had so much, even though I'm more confident, definitely more confident than I was when I was younger, I still had worries at this age about fear of, you know, like I said, fear of rejection, fear of failure. So it was really putting those thoughts out of my head and thinking if I didn't have those fears, what would I try? Really good. That's really good. You know, at 50, we're not guessing anymore. Okay, we know what we want, we know what we don't want, and that is just, I mean, so powerful. People really underestimate that. You know, and just remember that confidence doesn't come first, action does. So start start the action. Take that first step. Confidence will come.

Manel

Take that first step. Right. And do you know what's wild? The fastest growing group of entrepreneurs are in between ages of 35 and 65, which is classified in midlife.

Tina

Uh now that's one thing I never realized. I always thought midlife was kind of menopause time, starts in your 50s. Yes. But they actually classified midlife as aged 35 to 65. Yes. Which that is the biggest demographic.

Manel

It's almost 63% of women in the United States. That's that's a lot. That's insane. Anybody that's gearing things for people that are gear it for our us because it's the largest demographic. The largest demographic.

Tina

It's it's insane. 63%. But at the same time, I feel it's the most underlooked.

Manel

Yes. Under misunderstood. I think people it's it's because of the whole stigma of aging.

Tina

Right. And I because I feel like, okay, I'm more confident, but I'm a little more invisible at this age than I was in my twenties. Yes.

Manel

Yes, exactly. And people just don't, they kind of like underestimate us and they don't think that we are worthy of anything new, learning anything new. And it's actually the total opposite. Because as you learn, as you in enrich your knowledge of things such, we have something called neuroplasticity. Our brains are remarkable. So at any age, it's like that old fallacy of you know, you can't teach an old dog new tricks. Well, you can't. You can teach an old woman a new trick. Because the more you learn, the more the brain expands and the more learns. So it's that is false.

Tina

Right.

Manel

That is totally false.

Tina

That's interesting.

Manel

It really is amazing that people underestimate what they can do at this age. And it's so sad.

Tina

Right. Well, I think too, a lot of us are dealing with hormones and our memories.

Manel

And that's the problem.

Tina

You know, aren't as good as they were in their 20s. And so we start to sort of doubt.

Manel

Exactly. And that that's our biggest problem. It's that doubt that we put in. We we put our chains, we chain ourselves. It's not society, but we assist society to do that. We that doubt is our biggest failure. That's our biggest hindrance in life.

Tina

Very true. Very true. So look, friends, thanks for joining us today. And we are so excited you joined in the chat. So next time we meet, we're going to be talking about health and wellness and also depression at this stage in midlife.

Manel

And please don't forget to subscribe to our channel so you can be notified when our next episode's coming in. And tell your friends we look forward to seeing you again. See you soon.