
In the last edition of Boldly Becoming, we explored ten life transitions that often trigger the desire for reinvention.
Career plateaus.
Children becoming independent.
Aging parents.
Loss.
Health changes.
Milestone birthdays.
As many readers reflected on that list, they realized something important:
Several of those transitions were already unfolding in their own lives.
And that realization often brings an immediate follow-up question.
Now what?
If these life events are quietly awakening the desire for reinvention…
what are we supposed to do with that awareness?
For many women, the first instinct is to act quickly.
To make a plan.
To change something immediately.
To figure out the next chapter as soon as possible.
In my book SHIFT, I talk about the dangers of forging ahead too quickly.
Action feels productive. It feels decisive.
But forging ahead is actually the fourth step in a meaningful transformation process, not the first.
Before we rush into action, there are three important steps that come first.
First, we set our North Star—clarifying what truly matters and the direction we intentionally want our lives to move toward.
Then we determine our Here—honestly understanding where we are today.
And only after we have that clarity do we begin illustrating a path forward, exploring the possibilities that could lead us toward the life we want to create.
Only then does it make sense to forge ahead.
Reinvention rarely begins with action.
It begins with clarity.
Before we redesign our lives, we have to understand what our lives are trying to show us.
Pay Attention to What Is Changing
The events themselves are only part of the story.
What matters most is how those events are changing you.
You may notice that your interests are shifting.
Things that once energized you may no longer feel as compelling.
Or perhaps ideas, possibilities, or curiosities that once seemed distant are now quietly pulling at your attention.
These are not random feelings.
They are often signals that your life is evolving.
Resist the Urge to Rush the Answer
One of the most uncomfortable parts of reinvention is the space between chapters.
You may sense that something is changing, but not yet know what the new direction will be.
Many women rush through this stage because uncertainty feels uncomfortable.
But this period of reflection is not wasted time.
It is where clarity begins to form.
Sometimes the most important work is simply allowing yourself to ask better questions.
Get Curious About the Woman You Are Becoming
Instead of immediately trying to decide what to do next, try asking yourself:
What feels different in my life right now?
What parts of my life still feel aligned?
What parts of my life feel like they belong to an earlier version of me?
What am I becoming curious about?
Curiosity is often the earliest signal of a new chapter beginning.
Notice What Is Asking for More Space
Reinvention does not always begin by adding something new.
Sometimes it begins by recognizing what needs more space in your life.
More time.
More attention.
More honesty.
You may discover that what you truly need is not a dramatic change.
But a deeper alignment between your life and the woman you are becoming.
A Gentle Reminder
If you recognized yourself in last month’s newsletter, you may already be standing at the edge of reinvention.
But there is no need to rush.
Life rarely reveals the next chapter all at once.
More often, it unfolds slowly—through curiosity, reflection, and the courage to listen to what your life is quietly telling you.
And sometimes the most important step is simply this:
To pause long enough to notice that something new is beginning.
Reflection
Consider this question as you move through the coming weeks:
What in my life right now deserves my attention, curiosity, or care as I begin to imagine the next chapter?
Sometimes the first step toward reinvention is not changing your life.
It is learning to listen to it.
🌸 SHIFT Into Your Highest Self™
If you feel called to explore what your next chapter might look like, the SHIFT Into Your Highest Self Coaching Experience is designed to help women move from shrinking toward unapologetically thriving.