Welcome back to Become a Calm Mama. I'm your host. I'm Marilyn Childress.
Speaker:And on this episode, I've invited my friend and fellow
Speaker:colleague, Jennifer Delacroix, to come talk to me
Speaker:about midlife, post
Speaker:motherhood, middle age, being a woman at
Speaker:this time in our lives. She is a
Speaker:life coach and for the past few years has been coaching teenagers
Speaker:and has recently shifted into coaching women in
Speaker:midlife. And we talk a little bit about her reason for
Speaker:shifting and her shift in her podcast, which is called
Speaker:subtle shifts. I think if you are midlife, you will
Speaker:love to listen to this conversation and then also pop
Speaker:over to Jennifer's podcast and listen to
Speaker:her different topics around midlife, the different
Speaker:challenges we have at this age, and that podcast is called subtle shifts. So
Speaker:I hope you enjoy our conversation. Here we go.
Speaker:Hello? Hey. Hey. I wanna set up my mic.
Speaker:K. Oh, yeah. I need to do that too.
Speaker:It's nice to see you. It's good to see you too. It's been a
Speaker:while. I know. How was your mammogram? Got my
Speaker:got my mammy. Got my little boobies all checked out.
Speaker:Excellent. I feel like after getting a mammogram
Speaker:and I also did some blood work, I was like, I am a champion.
Speaker:Like, I wondered, I was like, I wondered if other people felt that way when
Speaker:you do, like, this things you're supposed to do in life. Yeah, I
Speaker:get like a little kick out of that. I'm like, very,
Speaker:I'm good at I'm good at taking care of myself. Look at me. I'm on
Speaker:top of stuff. Yeah. And also on top of stuff for me.
Speaker:Mhmm. I've always been good about keeping on top of stuff for the kids.
Speaker:Sure. But maybe not so much for myself. Uh-huh.
Speaker:Uh-huh. Yeah. Which is a very normal thing.
Speaker:It is, isn't it? Uh-huh. Yeah. It's kinda like what I wanted to talk
Speaker:about in some ways, because it's very interesting
Speaker:this midlife stage. And I don't even
Speaker:know what midlife is. I mean, I've raised my children. Right? This is for
Speaker:me. I'm at that stage where I got them to 18.
Speaker:You know? Like, yesterday, my youngest one turned 19 yesterday. Lincoln
Speaker:turns 21 soon. I'm like, yeah. Okay. I did the
Speaker:thing. Yeah. I know. Like I said before, yeah, you
Speaker:graduated. Like, you should have graduation party due when your kid turns
Speaker:18. Yeah. Or a retirement party, but then people didn't like that
Speaker:idea because they're like, you're never retired from parenting. How long is it gonna be,
Speaker:mom? And I'm like, well, no. I'm I'm pretty
Speaker:retired from the, like, day to day mothering of them. Yeah.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah. I don't think about, like, what they eat or do their
Speaker:laundry anymore. Right. You're just there as a
Speaker:consultant when necessary. Yeah. They're like they look they don't live here.
Speaker:Yeah. So it's like true. You're on
Speaker:call. Uh-huh. I'm on call. Exactly. Uh-huh.
Speaker:Yeah. Well, I wanted you to say a little bit about your
Speaker:podcast, your new podcast, like Yeah. Your shift to it. Tell me
Speaker:about it. So, is this it? Are we, are we
Speaker:recording our podcast right now? Yeah, we are. Okay.
Speaker:I'm into just like starting and just going. Let's just
Speaker:talk. Okay. Yeah. So I've been on your
Speaker:show before and you know me and we know each other. My past,
Speaker:I was a coach for parents and for teens,
Speaker:and I love doing that. But then I had
Speaker:kind of like this I like to call it a midlife I don't
Speaker:know. People call it a midlife crisis, but for me it was more like a
Speaker:a midlife wake up call kind of. I've been calling it
Speaker:midlife curious. Yeah. That works too. I
Speaker:I also call it a midlife evolution, but at the time it
Speaker:didn't feel like an evolution because I was like at the beginning, you know, it's
Speaker:the beginning where this whole, like, it felt like it's a
Speaker:burn it down in the, the, this first part is a burn it down.
Speaker:Exactly. I, it was, like, not just for my direction and
Speaker:my business, but there was a point where I was
Speaker:on vacation. I was in Hawaii with my family, and, you know,
Speaker:it's beautiful. And I was getting ready to
Speaker:turn 50 and, like, excited about
Speaker:that and proud about that. But at the same time, like, I have this kind
Speaker:of feeling like, what the fuck? I
Speaker:know. I'm in it because I I'm Yes. I turned 50 in
Speaker:September, and this is April. So I'm, like, six months.
Speaker:Yeah. There was just a moment there where I had already got
Speaker:started hormone replacement therapy and, like, postmenopausal. So it
Speaker:wasn't necessarily that I was in perimenopause, but my body did
Speaker:not feel like my body anymore. Like, I had gained
Speaker:weight. I was still working out, and I was still active. But I had
Speaker:gained weight, and I just didn't feel like good about my the way I looked.
Speaker:I didn't feel like myself. And there were I we could
Speaker:definitely talk about this, but I just was like, well, what, like, what's
Speaker:the what's the point? Like, what's what's going on in this life?
Speaker:The point? I don't have anything to look forward to. Like, the I wasn't
Speaker:excited about the future. I'm like, my whole life, I wanted to be a mom.
Speaker:And so I was a mom and my kids are getting older now, and now
Speaker:I'm turning 50. And then I'm like, so am I just gonna fade
Speaker:off into Oh my god. I thought a hundred times about this topic. Like,
Speaker:literally spent hours thinking about it. So yes.
Speaker:I'm right there with you. So, you know, anyway, so back to the
Speaker:trip, I was basically just hit this low point where I was just in the
Speaker:shower and I was crying and I was like, why do I
Speaker:feel so shitty? Why do I feel like shit? I
Speaker:have everything I ever wanted in my life. I had this business that I wanted
Speaker:and I grew and I feel really proud of. And I actually enjoy doing,
Speaker:I'm married. I love my husband. I've got some great kids. I'm on a trip
Speaker:with my family in this beautiful place, and I
Speaker:still feel like shit. And I was like, there's gotta be something
Speaker:different. I'm doing something wrong here. Like, there's something I'm missing, you
Speaker:know, all of these things. And and I could hear things can people say
Speaker:conceptually like, oh, this is where the magic begins or this is when you
Speaker:finally have time to focus on yourself. But I'm like, I don't even know what
Speaker:that means for me. Like, what do you mean focus on myself?
Speaker:I have, like, 100 thoughts. I just, like, wanna hear you talking. I'm like,
Speaker:uh-huh. Mhmm. Uh-huh. Mhmm. You do. You do. You do. Yeah. So it's
Speaker:like that moment in the shower, and I was just like, this ain't this ain't
Speaker:it. I don't know. And so I'm the type of person
Speaker:who just I I cannot sit in that
Speaker:discomfort for long before I I have had enough,
Speaker:and I need to take action. And so for me, the action
Speaker:for me, what that looked like was to start getting really,
Speaker:like, dialed in on my nutrition. Mhmm. And, like,
Speaker:that's triggering for me because I grew up in diet culture, and I don't even
Speaker:like talking about, like, counting calories. Like, it but I
Speaker:knew that what I was doing, everything that I had always done was no longer
Speaker:working. So I'm like, okay. Obviously, my body is needing something different now.
Speaker:I've always exercised, but I got a Peloton, and I
Speaker:started, you know, just being a little bit more intentional with the way I was
Speaker:eating. So that was like, step number one. Like, I'm gonna take charge
Speaker:of this part. Yeah. This area of
Speaker:dissatisfaction. I'm gonna take charge of that and do something. And so
Speaker:that kind of started to it didn't work, quote, unquote,
Speaker:meaning, like, it wasn't like I was started losing weight immediately. Like, I
Speaker:didn't. It was a whole month, and I was like, I'm still not losing weight,
Speaker:but I'm not quitting. And I just adjusted a few things.
Speaker:Eventually, the weight started to come off, but it wasn't just about the weight. It
Speaker:was like the past five years,
Speaker:we've all been through this collective trauma Yep. Upon
Speaker:trauma, upon trauma. And that on top of the fact that I
Speaker:moved from my home that I lived in for thirty
Speaker:five years to another state where I knew no one. And also,
Speaker:lo and behold, here comes a pandemic where I can't even make friends. So it
Speaker:was very isolating. I'd been through this big life transformation. My
Speaker:body was holding onto a lot of it, a lot of the trauma. So
Speaker:I got a therapist, and I started going to therapy again.
Speaker:I'd I'd done it before, but I was like, this there's something nagging,
Speaker:and I don't know what it is. So I enlisted help. I enlisted support. I
Speaker:did what I could do to change things,
Speaker:and I did like, I kind of did a what I like to call, like,
Speaker:going in the chrysalis. Yep. Right? Like, I'm gonna do some
Speaker:work here. And so that was gonna funny about the chrysalis thing real
Speaker:quick is that that I did my training with Martha Beck, and she has a
Speaker:lot of information about the change cycle. And what's
Speaker:fascinating about the chrysalis is that when a caterpillar goes into the
Speaker:chrysalis builds it, it actually turns into goop.
Speaker:Yeah. It doesn't just become a butterfly. It doesn't change form. It
Speaker:actually dissolves completely and then rebuilds itself.
Speaker:Yeah. We often think of it just like this transformation
Speaker:that I'm gonna go and, like, turn my fat little
Speaker:cutter caterpillar self and like the wings just sprout out. But
Speaker:no, you go into this, like primordial
Speaker:goop situation where all the cells are there and it gets
Speaker:rebuilt. Yeah. And that's meaning dissolving, like breaking
Speaker:stuff down so that it is quiet. It is
Speaker:you kind of need to have a chrysalis and no one can see you turn
Speaker:into goop. Exactly doing all that internal work.
Speaker:And it's not like the things that I'm currently
Speaker:building are being built on my old identity.
Speaker:Like, the Correct. It's Right. All the way broken down to build
Speaker:a new identity. Yes. That's and we can we I think we do this
Speaker:as women in a variety of periods of our lives. Like it
Speaker:happens when you become a mother, it becomes it could happen if you become a
Speaker:partner or wife, change career. Like there's different periods of
Speaker:time. If your parent dies or something like that, you lose a
Speaker:piece of your identity or you're building a new identity. And it's very
Speaker:little messy. Oh, yeah. So that is,
Speaker:you know, a part of the work. I did a lot of different types of
Speaker:things in in the internal work. And what's so funny is when I look
Speaker:back, I can see clearly what was going on. But when I'm in
Speaker:it when I was in it, it it felt chaotic. It was, like,
Speaker:uncomfortable talking about things that I never liked to even
Speaker:address. Like, I'm actually gonna talk about these things in a therapeutic
Speaker:setting and it and, like, look at it. Yeah. And work
Speaker:on starting to heal these things. Stories I've been telling myself since
Speaker:I was a kid. Right? Like, that's still echo in my life
Speaker:today. Right? So
Speaker:that whole thing happened. And then to go back to my
Speaker:podcast transition, after all of that, I started to
Speaker:really actually feel better in my life. Like, it was
Speaker:like the cloud started to lift, and I started
Speaker:to like, feel optimistic for the first time in
Speaker:years. It'd been a couple of years
Speaker:where I just was kinda like, what what's the point? Like,
Speaker:what's, what's there to do? I don't know. I actually started to
Speaker:feel like myself again, like, oh, there she
Speaker:is. And then
Speaker:be excited about and like not
Speaker:feel so heavy all of the time. So great
Speaker:metaphorically and physically. Yes, exactly.
Speaker:And to go back to the business with all that I went through and all
Speaker:that, I like the self reflection, it's
Speaker:kind of hard to describe without sounding too
Speaker:woo woo, but I'm gonna sound woo woo. Who cares? It's
Speaker:like the messages were very clear to me.
Speaker:Mhmm. What I'm here for is beyond what I
Speaker:am doing. What I am here for what I have to
Speaker:share, I should say, is way beyond what I am sharing.
Speaker:I for a while, I had felt kind of constrained in what I would talk
Speaker:about. Mhmm. Because I would be like, well, this doesn't really have to do with
Speaker:parenting a teenager. You know? So This is exactly why I have
Speaker:this new format of calm mama confessions, because
Speaker:I have so much to offer and so
Speaker:much other things I think about besides parenting, which I'm still
Speaker:100 people listening are like, she could have quit. Nope. Not me.
Speaker:I'm stunned. I'm in it to continue my mission of healing the next
Speaker:generation in advance. It's It's very clear to me. I'm on it. But
Speaker:that, yeah, the other pieces of healing
Speaker:journey and interests and this life
Speaker:stage that I'm in, that's not focused on my children as
Speaker:much. And, yeah, it's fascinating to me. And I'm like, I'm right
Speaker:there with you. I just kind of created added just added
Speaker:another segment of my podcast. Yeah. Exactly.
Speaker:And the purpose of the things that I talk about
Speaker:now on my podcast directly can relate
Speaker:to parenting. For sure. But it for me, it
Speaker:felt more expansive to be speaking to
Speaker:women in midlife. Yeah. Who also happen to
Speaker:maybe have teenagers. Mhmm. So it still is
Speaker:going to help them be a good mom and help them raise a teenager, but
Speaker:that's not all I'm talking about. Yeah. It's so freeing and, like,
Speaker:expansive. Yeah. So go kinda back to the woo. It was
Speaker:like it was, internal knowing, but also,
Speaker:like, there was a moment when I was on the Peloton, and this is
Speaker:oftentimes I'll get, like, thought downloads, I guess, you could say,
Speaker:just downloads in general with, like, inspiration is hitting me so fast
Speaker:and, like, I have to grab my phone and, like, start taking notes because I'm
Speaker:like, oh, this is good. This is good. Yeah. I've heard it described as,
Speaker:trying to catch a tiger by the tail and pull it
Speaker:back. Like, when you have a lot of inspiration at one time, sometimes that
Speaker:poetry can be that way where you're like, I I only know the back, the
Speaker:last I can't remember all of it, but let me try to pull pull from
Speaker:the tail back into some sort of harnessed way. So
Speaker:I Yeah. Exactly. And so that's where the subtle
Speaker:shifts method came through to me. And I'm like, that's exactly what I
Speaker:went through this year. And then when I look back on my life, I'm like,
Speaker:I've been through those three phases many times.
Speaker:Yeah. Many different situations, and it was just very clear to me
Speaker:like the, oh, these are the three phases. So this is what happens, and it's
Speaker:very easy to understand now on the other side that that's what was
Speaker:going on. Mhmm. And then you know really
Speaker:clearly what you might wanna walk someone through or what they might need to be
Speaker:walking themselves through and guiding that. Mhmm. Yeah.
Speaker:So all of that kind of came through and it was scary
Speaker:as as heck to just be like, I'm going
Speaker:to change the name of my podcast. That was
Speaker:hard. Yeah. Right. Because I had built that.
Speaker:I think it was maybe 150 plus episodes in,
Speaker:three years in. And, like, well, gosh. Am I just, like, throwing
Speaker:it all in the trash? But then I thought, you know what? All of those
Speaker:150 episodes are still there. And it's still me and it's
Speaker:still my advice and my thoughts and support. But now I'm also
Speaker:talking about these other things and it just felt so right that even
Speaker:though it was scary, it was like, well, I don't really have a choice because
Speaker:this is what's happening. Yeah. Yeah. We started a podcast
Speaker:similar time. And sometimes I do think about, like, I I still have a lot
Speaker:of content to teach, but then I'm like, do I really have another,
Speaker:like, a hundred and sixty hours of,
Speaker:like, content? Is it necessary when there's all of it is sitting there already? Is
Speaker:this beautiful resource? I'm like, yeah. If you're new to the podcast, just start from
Speaker:the beginning. Yeah. It's it's there. You know? It's
Speaker:great. Yeah. Yeah. So if anyone wants to buy your parenting
Speaker:support or the there's a backlog, yeah. You know, and
Speaker:I still coach people on parenting, like I guess people coming to me
Speaker:wanting support with their teenager. I still do that. Yeah. It's
Speaker:just, that's not all I'm talking about anymore. So good. Yeah.
Speaker:Subtle shifts. Yes. And so, like, the
Speaker:the name Settle Shifts is the name of my business,
Speaker:but it's been the name of my business since I very first became an
Speaker:entrepreneur and applied for my business license. And that was in
Speaker:2019. Mhmm. I named it. And
Speaker:that name itself came to me before I even started a
Speaker:business. It was probably maybe 2017 where I was
Speaker:like, gosh. If I had a business, I would name it this because that's really
Speaker:how I live my life. I don't do all everything
Speaker:all at once. I found that, you know, you just make little changes,
Speaker:things that feel doable and sustainable and you stick with it and you stick
Speaker:with it. And then eventually, a year down the road, things
Speaker:change drastically. It's a % in line with the way I approach
Speaker:life. And when I was like, what did I name my podcast? I'm like,
Speaker:well, duh. What you've always
Speaker:what you've always meant to name everything that you did.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah. That's so beautiful. I love
Speaker:it. I'm glad you shared that. Yeah. And I think that feeling of
Speaker:something not quite being right, like that area of dissatisfaction.
Speaker:It can be an invitation to explore
Speaker:areas of our life where, yeah, subtle shifts making
Speaker:changes, maybe you join a club or quit this
Speaker:friend group or stop going to the park at that time and could try something
Speaker:else. Like I, it doesn't have to be a massive change,
Speaker:but there's more available, more healing, more
Speaker:joy, more peace, more calm. It's like, it's out there, it's
Speaker:available. And we're just kind of plotting along trying to figure out
Speaker:how to get there, but we do have to see where we're not, it's not
Speaker:working and, yeah, keep moving forward. I can't even
Speaker:say that there was one thing or like, it's
Speaker:this that helped me feel more optimistic in my life. I can't
Speaker:pinpoint any of it. It was all of it. And that's where when we were
Speaker:talking about the chrysalis phase, I call it the cocoon phase. That's where the
Speaker:chaos happens. It's like it just feels like
Speaker:unsettling because you are doing different things, and you're talking about things or
Speaker:it's uncomfortable, and you're working behind the scenes, but nothing
Speaker:really is changing. It just it feels unsettled.
Speaker:Yeah. It's because there's a transformation happening and transformation
Speaker:isn't something that just feels so soft and lovely.
Speaker:Like it takes time. Yeah. No, the butterfly
Speaker:gets reformed inside and no one can see it. It's like it
Speaker:is its beautiful self fully formed
Speaker:inside before it comes out. It's not out yet. Right? So it's like
Speaker:the caterpillar gets totally gooped then rebuilt and no one
Speaker:can see it. And then what's interesting about a butterfly is that
Speaker:if you try to help it out of the cocoon, if you
Speaker:rip the cocoon or open up the chrysalis at all,
Speaker:the wings aren't strong enough to then fly.
Speaker:It has to struggle to come out.
Speaker:And that can also be uncomfortable where you're like, guess
Speaker:what? I have a new podcast name, or I'm gonna
Speaker:quit my job, or I wanna move, or whatever. I'm
Speaker:getting a divorce. Like, you know, who knows? And that
Speaker:kind of shift, that's the part that's really where everyone sees
Speaker:the internal work on the outside and you start to make those changes.
Speaker:And that is much harder
Speaker:than we think it will be and lots of obstacles, and that's why
Speaker:getting support is so good. Well, and that's why
Speaker:when you're feeling dissatisfied with your life,
Speaker:that's where it can be feels so I don't know, easy,
Speaker:I guess, or I'm just gonna ignore it. I'm gonna distract it. I'm gonna, you
Speaker:know, go on my phone and look at TikTok because I don't wanna think about
Speaker:the fact that I feel this way, or I'm gonna drink, or I'm gonna go
Speaker:online shopping, or plan another vacation that I can't afford.
Speaker:Like, I'm going to avoid this because I don't like thinking about it
Speaker:because I don't have a solution for it. You can do that. That
Speaker:dissatisfaction is there for a reason. It's there to as a
Speaker:message, and you can decide whether you wanna do
Speaker:something about it. And really, one of the hardest parts is just
Speaker:saying, you know what? I'm gonna do something. It's time to dive
Speaker:in. Yeah. Mhmm. Yeah. But once you do, it's
Speaker:like, soon enough, you'll be turning around and you'll feel like,
Speaker:gosh, I actually feel better. I keep something's working
Speaker:here. Yeah. I know. It does get better. I did
Speaker:confessions on the first time I like dipped into a healing
Speaker:journey at age 19. And what I was doing
Speaker:was like drinking, doing drugs, having sex, just really being
Speaker:out of bounds in those areas. And I kind of was it wasn't
Speaker:working for me. And I was like, I've got to make a change.
Speaker:And that was the beginning of that first kind of
Speaker:cocoon moment for me. And I
Speaker:remember I used to like go get high with everybody
Speaker:at, on the quad or whatever, at college.
Speaker:And this was my sophomore year. And then my friends were
Speaker:like, where are you going? Where are you going? And I was like,
Speaker:I have a meeting with some friends. Some
Speaker:like, I gotta go to a meeting. I didn't know what to say. I knew
Speaker:I didn't wanna go with them. Okay. But I wanted
Speaker:I didn't know where I was going. Okay. Like, I just
Speaker:going there? I just I was like I just lied. I just was like, I'm
Speaker:not I don't know. I have plans. I have to go do something. And I,
Speaker:like, remember walking around the campus just kinda, like, lost and not sure
Speaker:where to go. And there was this sign that was, like, need someone to
Speaker:have lunch with. And then, like, I was like, yeah. And then
Speaker:do. I walked into this room. There were all these nice people. It turned
Speaker:out it was a cult, which thankfully it got rescued from.
Speaker:I was like, but it was but anyway, there was something
Speaker:available, but I didn't know it. And then, you know,
Speaker:slowly but surely I made new friends. I moved home. I did a bunch of
Speaker:changes, and it was just all awful and uncomfortable and identity
Speaker:crushing and all of those things. And then at but even
Speaker:though, like, that day when I met the cult
Speaker:people, I still felt better because I wasn't just
Speaker:getting stoned in the quad as I done every day
Speaker:and feeling like shit and not not feeling connected to anybody and
Speaker:lost and insecure and all those things. I was like, I don't
Speaker:know. I'm just gonna feel differently. I'm just gonna find something else. And that's
Speaker:what you're you know, you make one small shift, subtle shift.
Speaker:Yes. Exactly. Yeah. It it doesn't take a lot. It just
Speaker:takes, like you said, doing something different Mhmm.
Speaker:And evaluating as you go. Mhmm. I had my
Speaker:first life crisis at 25.
Speaker:Mhmm. I called it a quarter life crisis. Yeah. Where I
Speaker:had, you know, gone to school, got my degree, went
Speaker:into the corporate world. I was in in human resources making a pretty
Speaker:good salary. Like, I had checked all the boxes, and I
Speaker:hated what I was doing. I was like, I went through
Speaker:three different jobs in, like, a year and a half, and and I kept thinking,
Speaker:well, this isn't the right job. I just need another job. If I get a
Speaker:different job, then I'll like what I'm doing, and, of course, not. And I I
Speaker:didn't like any of it. And so I just quit, and I
Speaker:went backpacking in Europe. Yeah. I
Speaker:I have to this is not what I wanna do. And so that was kind
Speaker:of one of my other transformational experiences. And I came back and I
Speaker:went back to school to be a teacher. Yeah. Alright.
Speaker:Sometimes we have to drop drop an identity with but
Speaker:we don't know what the new identity is gonna be. And it's I mean,
Speaker:backpacking across Europe sounds very lovely and idyllic and all of those things,
Speaker:but you're taking your your sad lost self with you.
Speaker:And, you know, you look at eat, pray, love or
Speaker:wild. Right? You look at these stories, we read them and we make them so
Speaker:inspirational and they're so courageous. And, but
Speaker:what we are always missing when we glorify
Speaker:those stories is the pain that drove the decision, the
Speaker:actual discomfort, and then the journey
Speaker:through to something else that it's always uncomfortable.
Speaker:Yes. Good. And uncomfortable. And I
Speaker:can talk about I can put on my rose colored glasses and
Speaker:be like, oh, I was in Europe. And I had this moment when I looked
Speaker:around and realized that not everyone lives the way that I've
Speaker:been raised to believe is a successful way of living. I don't have to
Speaker:live. Like, yes. I had those moments of realization, but
Speaker:in truth, I came back and I got another HR job.
Speaker:Yeah. Because I didn't know what else to do. Mhmm. But it was when I
Speaker:had that job that I made the decision to go back to school.
Speaker:So it wasn't the trip that changed everything for me, but it
Speaker:was part of it. Yeah. And it was just saying, I need to find a
Speaker:different way. I don't know what that's gonna look like yet. Yeah.
Speaker:And it I think to go back to the topic
Speaker:of being in midlife and feeling dissatisfied,
Speaker:it has to do with the same type of thing that I was dealing with
Speaker:at 25. I was dealing with it again at 50, and that is
Speaker:this is society's version of what it means to have made
Speaker:it in the in the world and what success means and what it means
Speaker:to be a woman and all of these, like,
Speaker:identities that have been imposed upon us. And some of them
Speaker:are not in alignment with what is our top
Speaker:values. Yeah. Yeah. We're living someone else's
Speaker:dream in some way. Or lack of
Speaker:concept. This is a thing that I've been thinking a lot about
Speaker:is that I actually don't have a concept of
Speaker:post child rearing, pre grandmother
Speaker:ring, right? I don't even have a mount mind
Speaker:map or a model of this period of time. And
Speaker:I've been wondering why that is. And looking
Speaker:around at the variety of models in the world of people
Speaker:who have done it before me. And really, I think
Speaker:a lot of times women switch from caregiving to children
Speaker:to caregiving to their elderly parents. Yeah. And
Speaker:that is a beautiful thing that we
Speaker:can do as a society. But a lot of times, the
Speaker:elderly parent comes right as the
Speaker:your youngest is graduating or, you know, kind
Speaker:of you might have a couple maybe a year or two. But it's like, it
Speaker:becomes a very important thing, then you're grieving, and then you're in this whole process
Speaker:with your elderly parent. And then you kinda get through that possibly, and then
Speaker:there's grand You become a grandparent. Like, I think women are just most of
Speaker:my models are around caregiving in many ways.
Speaker:And I don't have
Speaker:that. My mom is gone. I don't have it. I I did the
Speaker:elderly parent thing when I had a 10 year old and walked through
Speaker:Alzheimer's when the kids were younger, which was
Speaker:absolutely challenging to have young kids who still need
Speaker:babysitters while also driving an elderly person to the doctor. But now
Speaker:I'm, like, pretty free, and I my kids are
Speaker:pretty good. And I'm like, oh, what's what's it gonna look like? It's a lot
Speaker:of open ended excitement, but then also a
Speaker:little bit overwhelming. It definitely is because
Speaker:for so long, we haven't had that freedom. And so it can feel
Speaker:unsettling, like something must be wrong if I have so
Speaker:much time or I'm not used to having this time, and I don't know what
Speaker:to do with it. I don't know how to fill it. Yep. Yeah. And if
Speaker:I'm not caring for someone because that's my job,
Speaker:what's what value do I have to give then? Yeah. Or
Speaker:what is even the purpose of my day? Right. You know? That's why so
Speaker:many people in midlife, women in midlife get dogs.
Speaker:Yeah, of course. Yeah. Oh, that's lovely. It's great
Speaker:grounding and gives you somebody to care for and take care
Speaker:of and all of those things. Yeah. I also
Speaker:think it's frustrating in this age because we're
Speaker:also pretty tired, like, just physiological. There's so
Speaker:many changes that happen that are normal and part of
Speaker:aging and part of being menopausal or post, you know, peri or
Speaker:post or whatever. And also kinda maybe slowing down
Speaker:and giving fewer fucks about some stuff. So what used to
Speaker:matter a lot doesn't matter as much. Even if it's
Speaker:not caregiving, maybe it's just style or your home. Like, you've
Speaker:already decorated your home or, you know, there's a lot of check boxes
Speaker:you've done along the way, and then you've had peace around those areas or if
Speaker:you work through those areas. And so it's like, I'm
Speaker:not motivated and I'm pretty tired. So it can
Speaker:be kind of easy to feel like a bump on the
Speaker:log. Yeah. And Yeah. And just I'm just gonna
Speaker:lounge around on the couch and watch Netflix. Yeah. I
Speaker:don't have the If I can, and I don't really I've done a lot
Speaker:already today. And, like, I don't know. I don't have to
Speaker:go run around from three to seven and pick up people.
Speaker:And I've worked my business in such a way that I was
Speaker:available every afternoon for teenagers. And now I'm
Speaker:very available to myself. Right. Well, I'm
Speaker:also a little tired. Yeah. And I've worked out and I've walked
Speaker:and I've done my work and I had it's not time to make dinner
Speaker:yet. And I get a little bit like, what do I What do I do?
Speaker:What do I do? I don't know. Yeah. That's a it's an interesting stage.
Speaker:It's, it is satisfying. It can be very satisfying, but it can
Speaker:also feel like you're very lost. Yeah. To go back to when you
Speaker:conceptualize motherhood and being a woman and all of
Speaker:that, I think about when I was a child, I would think about
Speaker:what I wanna be when I grow up. I wanted to be a mom. Mhmm.
Speaker:And in no version of that vision of being a mom
Speaker:was it when my kids are older and have moved out.
Speaker:Yeah. That didn't create any sort of map. I wanted to I wanted to have
Speaker:a family. I wanted to have a home. I wanted to have a marriage. I
Speaker:wanted to have a career. Eventually, I wanted to have a career.
Speaker:And yeah. After that, like, I don't know. We
Speaker:just have this, like, idea of you just keep working and then
Speaker:retire or something, and that's fine. But there's, like, a chunk
Speaker:of decade there in the middle. There's
Speaker:space between retirement and your kids move out. Yeah. We
Speaker:hope. Right? Yeah. It depends on how you time it all, but yeah, for us,
Speaker:that's true. Mhmm. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think that,
Speaker:you know, vacationing or exploring or build like,
Speaker:one of my goals this year was to make new friends. And
Speaker:that has been pretty interesting. I
Speaker:just decided, like, I have this whole parking juju where I just make create
Speaker:parking spots For myself, whenever I go anywhere, I just
Speaker:say, Oh, I can't wait to find my parking spot. Yeah. I get excited. And
Speaker:I usually I park in juju, and my friends all know, and they asked me
Speaker:to turn it on and stuff like that. My my family thinks it's
Speaker:bullshit, but they also always ask me to turn it on. So I'm like, is
Speaker:it bullshit or what? So I was like, I'm just gonna use
Speaker:parking Juju for friend Juju. I'm just gonna assume my
Speaker:new friends are out there, and I can't wait to meet them. Yeah. And I
Speaker:have made two new friends. Yay. Yeah. And it's
Speaker:been very fun and interesting. And so,
Speaker:yeah, just kind of exploring like what else is out there. And,
Speaker:yeah, that kind of brings me to something, a realization
Speaker:that's similar. That is, I have
Speaker:close relationships with my family, and I lived in San Diego. My kids were
Speaker:young. I had a lot of really close mom friends. And when I
Speaker:moved, I had my family. And like I said, we didn't have a
Speaker:lot of ability to connect with people in person. And so
Speaker:the, like, the habit, I guess, a lot of us
Speaker:probably got into was just being home. Mhmm. Even if we
Speaker:have friends. It's just comfortable to be home because we got used to being home,
Speaker:and it takes effort. Yeah, it does to make a
Speaker:coffee date to meet for lunch, to reorganize your
Speaker:day. Yeah. And then it's work because they're new
Speaker:people and you don't necessarily know them and
Speaker:you're not sure it's not like slipping on a really comfortable sweater. I mean, I
Speaker:have some deer. I have an amazing group of friends.
Speaker:And we've been raising our babies together new group I know before I
Speaker:had babies, and still friends with them. And I just when I'm with
Speaker:them, it's like, warm saucer milk. Yep. It's like, so
Speaker:comforting and so easy. And they don't all
Speaker:live near me. And so I was like, I want to make friends that live
Speaker:near me so that I can meet up for coffee.
Speaker:Yeah. It's been interesting. I like have really liked it. It's like
Speaker:dating. It is like dating. Like you don't meet for coffee and you kind of
Speaker:feel each other out. Like, are you my kind of person? Do we be into
Speaker:the same kind of Where'd you grow up? Right. Tell me a little bit
Speaker:about you. Are you an only child? Like, are your
Speaker:parents still living? Like, that's It's totally
Speaker:midlife women dating. I mean, it's friendship dating. That's what
Speaker:we can call it. Yeah. It is friendship dating, and it's really
Speaker:amazing and also weird and hard and
Speaker:fun and dumb and the whole, all of it. It's
Speaker:everything about dating, I guess. Yeah. But again, it comes down
Speaker:to your willingness to be uncomfortable. Like it's uncomfortable
Speaker:to go to these things where you might be meeting people. Like I've gone to
Speaker:networking events. I've gone to like meetups with your crafting
Speaker:type stuff where you don't know anyone and then
Speaker:you show up and you're like, gosh, I, you know, I hope, I hope somebody
Speaker:likes me, you know, it's uncomfortable. I definitely think I hope I like
Speaker:someone. I hope I like someone. I hope that I don't hate
Speaker:everyone. I hope there's one cool person
Speaker:that I can chat with. Just one. But it requires
Speaker:your willingness to be uncomfortable. Yeah. I think you're really speaking to that post
Speaker:pandemic quarantine time. Like, it is still a
Speaker:habit, especially for mid midlifers because, like, my
Speaker:kids were eighth and ninth grade when the pandemic started.
Speaker:And by the time the pandemic ended, my
Speaker:kids were driving. Like, the transition out
Speaker:of parenting was so like a sledgehammer just
Speaker:kinda came down on I was no longer going to the
Speaker:school functions and this and that, and, like, connected to the school community. They both
Speaker:were just starting at high school, and I never really got connected
Speaker:into the high school mom vibe. There was a pandemic, and
Speaker:then I had my mom die and my sister die and I was building this
Speaker:business. And I just was like in my world. And my boys were fine. They
Speaker:weren't all that interested in high school either. So I was like, just go get
Speaker:it done. And over that those years, I
Speaker:became more and more disconnected from my own community.
Speaker:And I got, like, looked around. I'm like, well, I've got, like,
Speaker:one friend that lives near me. Yeah. Or a couple, and then my
Speaker:book club who I love. And I was just like, this is not working for
Speaker:me. I want to have more connection in real life.
Speaker:Yeah. Because you and I are friends, but we live like my it's different states.
Speaker:And so Yeah. You can't be everyday friends. Mhmm. I know.
Speaker:And that's been my goal this year is to meet
Speaker:up with people in person and to also
Speaker:create opportunities for people to meet up in person.
Speaker:I'm gonna start hosting a women's circle at the yoga
Speaker:studio nearby, and I'm participating in a yoga
Speaker:festival festival where I'm being an instructor. I'm just putting myself in
Speaker:places where I can meet people who wanting to
Speaker:meet people as well. Yeah. I think it's really
Speaker:beautiful to see it as a society that more and more people are
Speaker:coming out of that kind of, like, phase. And, like, when you have
Speaker:younger kids, you are going out in the world.
Speaker:You're meeting friends that that the pickup you know, school
Speaker:pickup and that the your kids, you need to know who they're hanging out with.
Speaker:So you connect with the parents and you're at the soccer and the
Speaker:game afterwards and the dance recital and all the
Speaker:things that they're doing. And it's good.
Speaker:It's actually really healthy to be in a community.
Speaker:And it can be really easy as we get into midlife to
Speaker:let some of that go. And we have to work harder. It's easy if you
Speaker:have kids in many ways to meet new people. And
Speaker:especially for people like you and I who work at home. Yes.
Speaker:Yeah. I'm just in my own little world here with my
Speaker:husband. So yeah. Right. And for me, I just
Speaker:recently started, being more intentional about
Speaker:embodied living. So in person in my
Speaker:life and with people as much as possible, and
Speaker:I'm going places. I'm doing things. I'm doing my
Speaker:best to not live in isolation, especially for me
Speaker:because I live rurally. Like, I'm I'm close to the
Speaker:city, but I'm very far removed. Like, you can't see a house from
Speaker:my house. So it does take a significant amount
Speaker:of effort and intention to put myself
Speaker:where people are. Mhmm. Yeah. I guess
Speaker:not everybody needs to do that. Right? So someone's listening and they're like, I'm full.
Speaker:I've got enough going on. I'm good. I don't really want any more friends.
Speaker:Like, fine. It's when you start to feel the loneliness
Speaker:or whatever that dissatisfaction is when you're on vacation with
Speaker:your family and you're crying in the shower. That is
Speaker:the indication to you that maybe things aren't as great as you
Speaker:thought they were. And that doesn't mean there's
Speaker:anything wrong with you. It doesn't mean that you've done something
Speaker:wrong. I really do think of dissatisfaction as an
Speaker:invitation, not a criticism. It's just like,
Speaker:This is interesting. Like, that's why I'm calling it this midlife
Speaker:curious, because I just find that I'm very curious about
Speaker:my areas of dissatisfaction.
Speaker:Yeah. And just always being willing to look at how you're
Speaker:living your life and what you're willing to adjust
Speaker:or get curious around changing to see if it
Speaker:impacts how you're feeling. When I started doing this embodied living thing,
Speaker:I noticed that I was finding more joy in
Speaker:everyday things. Yeah. Like, just like preparing a meal or
Speaker:Yeah. Just everyday things. Like, even chores, like you said,
Speaker:folding laundry, just enjoying the quality
Speaker:of life in the moment versus
Speaker:when we were younger moms, it's go go go do do do.
Speaker:There's not a moment to pause as you it's not as easy to
Speaker:do that, but now we have the space to do it, but it takes intention
Speaker:to do it. Yeah. It can be a habit of rush, rushing
Speaker:and a habit of disconnection. And I think even as you know,
Speaker:most of the people listen to my pack, my podcasts have younger kids
Speaker:and it's like, you don't have to rush,
Speaker:actually. Like, you can practice slowing down as well and being a
Speaker:little more present. It might of course, you have got three kids and
Speaker:you gotta get everybody's into bed pajamas and get them with their
Speaker:teeth brushed and all the things and get everyone out the door in the morning.
Speaker:It's hard. If we slow down just a little bit and
Speaker:kind of connect to our bodies and connect to what we're doing,
Speaker:our kids will be more regulated. They will be more compliant. You
Speaker:know, you can get more ease in your
Speaker:life by just being a little slower, a little
Speaker:more present. Yeah. Mhmm. It's a it's a
Speaker:lifelong practice. It for sure is. It's not something it's
Speaker:subtle. It's subtle shifts. Subtle shift.
Speaker:Okay. Well, thank you. I love this conversation. It's so good. And
Speaker:it's important. I'm really like, when you invited me on, I'm
Speaker:like, heck. Yeah. I'm gonna come and talk about this because there are so
Speaker:many women who are feeling this way in isolation. And Yeah. Maybe
Speaker:thinking I've done something wrong or I'm missing something.
Speaker:But there are so many of us that feel this way, and when we
Speaker:have conversations and they open about it and normalize
Speaker:this, the experience. Yeah. So good.
Speaker:No, one's talking about it. Yep. Keep the conversation going for
Speaker:sure. All right. Well, thanks for hanging out. Yeah.
Speaker:Thanks for having me. Bye.