There is something about your mid-40s.
I sit here, somewhere between 45 and 50, and find myself rethinking my entire life. Not because everything is wrong. Not because I’m unhappy. But because for the first time, I feel like I can see clearly.
And sometimes I wonder: if I had this mindset when I was younger, this knowing, this self-awareness, this love for myself, would I have allowed certain people into my life? Would I have stayed in situations that never truly served me? Would I have spent so much time trying to earn things that were never mine to earn?
What is it about being in your mid-40s that makes you stop and ask:
Why am I doing this?
Why am I here?
Why am I still allowing certain things into my life?
For the first time, I find myself wanting less—not because I’ve given up, but because I’ve finally figured out what matters.
I don’t know that I care about being someone’s love interest anymore.
I don’t feel incomplete without a relationship.
I don’t need someone to validate me.
I don’t need someone to pour into my cup.
I want to pour into my own cup.
And the strange thing is, I’ve been practicing that for years.
Maybe because somewhere deep down, I learned early that I couldn’t depend on someone else to do it for me.
Maybe it came from growing up around emotionally unavailable adults. Maybe it came from spending a lifetime regulating my emotions to make other people comfortable.
I learned how to swallow disappointment.
How to manage anger.
How to quiet sadness.
How to soften my truth so it wouldn’t hurt someone else.
I became an expert at emotional regulation.
But sometimes I wonder: who taught me that my emotions were the ones that always needed managing?
What happens when you’ve spent decades holding everything together?
Where does all that unsaid truth go?
And then one day, in your mid-40s, something shifts.
You realize that all the things you thought you were supposed to want don’t matter anymore.
The house.
The white picket fence.
The backyard.
The parties.
The image.
The performance.
The checklist.
You wake up one day and realize you don’t want any of it.
Not because you’re bitter.
Not because you’re broken.
But because you’ve finally become honest.
What I want now is peace.
A space where I can be 100% myself.
A life where I don’t have to explain who I am.
A life where I don’t need permission to exist exactly as I am.
Sometimes I imagine standing alone in the middle of an empty town, like the end of I Am Legend. No expectations. No obligations. No audience. No one to call. No one to impress.
Just me.
And the feeling isn’t loneliness.
It’s freedom.
It’s completeness.
It’s loving myself enough to know that I am already whole.
There is something about this season of life that makes you start shedding attachments.
Social media.
Friendships that no longer fit.
Relationships built on obligation.
Ideas about success.
Ideas about love.
Ideas about who you’re supposed to be.
One by one, they fall away.
And what’s left is the truth.
The only thing I truly want is for my daughter to grow up knowing something I had to learn the hard way:
Love yourself first.
Know your worth.
Teach people how to treat you.
And never accept less than what you deserve.
I think about how different my life might have been if I had known that at 20.
Maybe I would have become this version of myself sooner.
Maybe I wouldn’t have spent years chasing things that were never meant for me.
But maybe every lesson was necessary.
Maybe this version of me could only arrive now.
Because there is something about your mid-40s.
One day you wake up, and the fear of being alone disappears.
The need to prove yourself disappears.
The need to settle disappears.
And in its place is something far more powerful:
The unwavering belief that if something isn’t aligned with your peace, your purpose, and your self-respect, you can simply walk away.
And for the first time in your life, walking away doesn’t feel like loss.
It feels like coming home to yourself.