Why starting over after 50 feels exciting, terrifying, and slightly ridiculous all at the same time
What no one tells you…. Reinventing yourself after 50 is awkward as hell.
Not inspiring.
Not glamorous.
And definitely not the kind of transformation where you wake up one morning glowing with confidence, refreshed, and completely sure of who you are.
Nope.
Most days it feels more like trying something new, something that feels a little too bold⦠and wondering if youāve just made a terrible mistake.
Or starting a new project that excites you so much you can barely sit still⦠and then immediately wondering if youāve completely lost your mind.
The other day I stood in my closet holding a shirt that felt very ānew version of me.ā
It wasnāt wild. It wasnāt flashy.
But it was definitely outside my usual comfort zone.
I stared at it for a full two minutes wondering if I looked bold⦠or like someone going through a very confusing midlife identity crisis.
You know the feeling.
Half of you is excited.
The other half is thinking, āIs this brave⦠or have I completely lost my mind?ā
Apparently this is what reinvention actually looks like.
And I was not prepared.
The Part Nobody Talks About
When people talk about changing their lives, they usually focus on the big brave moments.
The decision to start something new.
The moment you say yes to a dream.
The big, inspiring āthis is my timeā declaration.
What they donāt talk about is the phase right after that.
The awkward phase.
The part where youāre not the old version of yourself anymore⦠but the new version still feels like youāre wearing someone elseās boots.
You like the boots.
You just arenāt entirely sure how to walk in them yet.
And every step feels a little clunky.
A little uncertain.
Like you might trip over your own enthusiasm at any moment.
That Moment When You Realize Youāre Changing
For me, the realization crept in slowly.
After raising three amazing kids and spending years doing all the things moms do – the schedules, the responsibilities, the constant making sure everyone else was okay⦠something shifted.
Suddenly there was space.
Space to think.
Space to wonder.
Space to ask a slightly terrifying question:
What do I actually want now?
That question can sneak up on you.
Because once you ask it, you canāt really un-ask it.
And the answers start showing up in unexpected ways.
Maybe you want to try something creative.
Maybe you want to dress a little differently.
Maybe you start having ideas that feel exciting and slightly ridiculous at the same time.
And before you know it, youāre standing there thinking:
āWait⦠am I becoming a different person?ā
The answer is yes.
And itās weird.
The Confidence Myth
Somewhere along the way, we were all sold this idea that confidence is supposed to feel powerful and effortless.
Like one day you wake up and suddenly youāre fearless.
You know exactly who you are.
You stride into the world with complete certainty.
Let me just say right nowā¦
That has not been my experience.
At all.
Confidence, at least the kind Iām discovering, feels a lot more like doing something while simultaneously thinking:
This might be a terrible idea.
It looks like trying something new while your brain whispers:
āAre we really doing this?ā
It looks like sharing an idea and immediately wanting to hide under a blanket for a few hours.
And honestly, it looks a lot like awkward courage.
Hereās the strange thing about being over fifty.
Weāve handled childbirth, teenagers, family schedules, jobs, bills, and more responsibility than most people realize.
But trying a new hairstyle or starting a blog suddenly makes us feel like weāre breaking some kind of rule.
Itās funny when you think about it.
We survived raising teenagers⦠but apparently wearing something slightly outside our comfort zone is where we draw the line.
A Confession
I say all the time that I donāt care what people think.
And on some level, thatās true.
Iām at a point in life where Iām much less interested in living by someone elseās expectations.
But if Iām being completely honest, thereās a tiny detail I tend to leave out.
I donāt actually care what people think.
I just donāt want to see their reaction.
You know what I mean.
That moment when you try something new and someone raises an eyebrow.
Or pauses for just a second too long before responding.
Or gives you that look that says, āHuh⦠thatās different.ā
Itās not even criticism.
Itās just⦠reaction.
And apparently my brain would prefer to avoid that part entirely.
Unfortunately, thatās not how reinvention works.
The Strange In-Between Stage
Right now I feel like Iām living in a strange in-between place.
Iām not the woman I used to be.
But Iām also not fully comfortable being the woman Iām becoming.
And that space in the middle?
Itās awkward.
My brain lately has two very distinct voices.
These two voices have been negotiating my reinvention process for months now.
One day I feel excited about the things Iām creating and the ideas Iām exploring.
Voice number one says:
āLook at you! Starting new things, trying new ideas, building something exciting!ā
The next day Iām pretty sure Iāve completely lost my mind.
Voice number two says:
āShouldnāt we maybe calm down and fold some laundry like a responsible adult instead?ā
Then the following day Iām back to feeling inspired again.
Itās a bit of an emotional roller coaster.
But Iām starting to realize something important about this stage.
Itās not a sign that something is wrong.
Itās actually a sign that something is changing.
The Wildflower Effect
Iāve been thinking a lot about wildflowers lately.
Stay with me here.
Wildflowers grow in places you donāt expect.
Cracks in sidewalks.
Empty fields.
Along the side of the road where nobody planted them.
Theyāre not carefully arranged or perfectly symmetrical.
Theyāre a little messy.
A little unpredictable.
But they grow anyway.
They donāt ask permission.
They donāt wait until conditions are ideal.
They just show up and bloom where they are.
And thatās when it hit me.
I think reinvention is a little like that.
It doesnāt arrive neatly packaged with a step-by-step plan.
It grows slowly, awkwardly, in the middle of your life.
Sometimes in places you didnāt even know were empty.
Doing It Anyway
So hereās the decision Iāve come to lately.
Iām going to be awkward.
Iām going to have ideas that feel exciting and slightly ridiculous.
Iām going to try things before I feel completely ready.
Iām going to create things that might not make sense to everyone else.
And if I occasionally feel like Iām stumbling through this whole reinvention processā¦
Well, thatās probably just part of it.
Because the woman I used to be spent a lot of years making sure everything looked right from the outside.
Making sure expectations were met.
Making sure no one thought I was too different or too bold or too much.
And while thereās nothing wrong with that version of meā¦
She was also a little tired.
The Truth About Starting Over
I think part of what makes reinvention feel so awkward is that we assume weāre supposed to know what weāre doing.
At this age weāve raised families, built careers, handled responsibilities, and figured out a lot of life along the way. Somewhere along the line we start believing that by now we should have everything neatly sorted out.
So when we find ourselves trying something new again – learning, experimenting, stepping outside our comfort zones – it can feel strangely uncomfortable.
Almost like weāre breaking some unwritten rule.
But maybe thatās the real surprise about this stage of life.
Maybe weāre not finished growing.
Maybe weāre just finally getting curious enough to explore parts of ourselves we didnāt have time for before.
And maybe feeling a little awkward while you figure that out isnāt a sign that youāre doing something wrong.
Maybe itās just proof that youāre still becoming.
A Thought for Anyone Else in This Stage
If you happen to be in this awkward reinvention phase too, I want you to know something.
Youāre not the only one.
There are a lot of us out here quietly figuring out who we are in the second half of life.
Trying new things.
Exploring ideas.
Rediscovering parts of ourselves we didnāt have time to notice before.
At this point Iāve decided reinvention probably isnāt supposed to look graceful.
Sometimes it shows up looking like enthusiasm, curiosity, and a little internal panic.
But maybe thatās okay.
Maybe the goal isnāt to reinvent ourselves perfectly.
Maybe the goal is just to start becoming the person weāve been curious about all along.
Even if we feel slightly awkward doing it.
So Here I Am
Right now Iām probably about ninety percent excited about this new chapter.
And ten percent internally screaming.
But Iām learning that those two feelings can exist at the same time.
Excitement and uncertainty.
Courage and awkwardness.
Growth and self-doubt.
Apparently thatās just what reinvention looks like sometimes.
And honestly, at this stage of life Iām starting to think a little awkward bravery might be better than another decade of playing it safe.
And you know what?
Iām doing it anyway.
So tell me⦠what would you do differently right now if you stopped worrying about looking awkward?
