For a long time, our culture sent an unequivocal message about wanting more for yourself, and it wasn’t a kind one.
That kind of thinking can quietly hold you back, especially as you
approach retirement.
If you’ve spent much of your life being responsible, dependable, and
useful to others, it can feel uncomfortable, even wrong, to ask what you
want next. Yet midlife reinvention depends on that very question.
Recently, I was talking with my adopted daughter, who has just turned
50. We were discussing work, savings, and the long view of retirement. She’s
considering reducing her hours at work. Not because she’s lazy or disengaged,
but because her supervisor is under pressure and, as a result, has begun
micromanaging her. The work itself hasn’t changed, but the environment has, and
it’s taking a toll.
At the same time, she’s thinking seriously about her pension and whether
she’s saving enough. Turning 50 has sharpened her focus. It’s made the future
feel real in a way it didn’t at 40.
What she’s doing isn’t self-indulgent. It’s thoughtful. It’s
responsible. It’s the work of renewal.
For many people, 50 is a milestone year. It invites reflection, not
panic. You begin to review the decisions you’ve made, the paths you’ve
followed, and the ones you didn’t take. From that reflection often comes a
desire to make changes, not dramatic gestures, but meaningful adjustments.
I’ve seen this before.
When Boomers began turning 50, many lives shifted. Divorce rates rose as
couples re-evaluated relationships that no longer fit. People changed jobs,
redefined friendships, and questioned long-held assumptions about success and
happiness. Beneath all of that was a search for voice and values, a desire to
live more honestly in the time that remained.
Reinvention often begins here, but it doesn’t end quickly.
For some, it takes years to find the courage to make the changes they
sense they need. That’s normal. The important thing is not speed, but
direction. Starting the journey matters more than finishing it neatly.
Creating more space for what you want doesn’t mean taking something away
from others. It means reconnecting with your own voice and allowing it to be
part of the conversation again. It means aligning your days with your values,
rather than simply filling them with obligation.
Retirement is not a reward for endurance. It’s a chapter of life that
needs to be shaped with care.
As this series closes, I hope you take one idea with you: wanting
something more for yourself is not a moral failing. It’s a natural, healthy
response to experience, reflection, and growth. The work of midlife is not to
disappear quietly, but to create a life that feels true to who you are now.
The script doesn’t end at 50. That’s where many people finally pick up
the pen.