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Why You Should Commit to the Carry-On and Tips for Making it Easy

Why You Should Commit to the Carry-On and Tips for Making it Easy

The world is divided into two different kinds of people: overpackers and underpackers. If you fall into the first category, don’t turn away yet! Give me a few minutes to try and convince you that there is a better way to travel.

As you might already suspect, I am an underpacker. My measure of a packing fail: Coming home with even one thing in my suitcase that I did not need, use or wear during my trip. I do fail sometimes, but not often anymore.

Here’s how to pack lighter – all lessons I learned the hard way.

Start with an Attitude Change

It helps that I don’t really care how I look. I don’t mean I would travel in ripped or dirty clothes. But I don’t need to be the glammed up center of attention. In fact, when you’re traveling, the more you can blend in, the better. You’re less likely to be targeted by pickpockets and local scammers.

Spend a little time researching what the locals wear and try to pack like that. This is the lesson I learned when I wore my electric blue winter coat to Romania, a former Soviet block country where there were two colors of winter coat: grey and black.

So if you simply must be a fashion plate, try to pare down the clothes to a capsule wardrobe of items you can mix and match and pieces that will do double duty.

Use a Packing List

These printable packing lists will give you a feel for the things you’ll need. If the list includes something you don’t think you’ll need, don’t pack it. If there is something missing, make a note on the printed sheet so you don’t forget it.

Check the Weather Forecast

I make this recommendation because I live in Chicago. We like to say, “If you don’t like the weather, wait 10 minutes.” Here, the calendar might say May, but the thermometer might say March. Or July.

So check the forecast for your destination. It will tell you whether to pack a raincoat, sunhat, shorts, or sweaters.

Start Packing Early

If you have a spare bed, room, couch or some other spot to hold the things you want to pack, start a week early and put everything on the bed that you think you might want on your trip.

Then walk away.

Come back the next day and look it over. Is there anything missing? Is there anything you think you might not need on the trip? Make adjustments accordingly.

Then walk away.

Come back the next day with the intention of making choices. If you have two pairs of pants on the bed, take away one pair. If you have four shirts, take away two. And so on, until you have cut in half the things on the bed.

Then walk away.

The next day, it’s time to pack. Start with the pieces of clothing you absolutely MUST have with you.

If you run out of suitcase before you run out of clothes to pack, you get to make a choice: Leave something else behind or pay $40 or more to check a bag.

Buy Packing Cubes

I resisted buying this travel essential for years. Now I can’t believe I ever traveled without them.

Packing cubes are flexible pouches with a brilliant zipper system. You pack them with the clothes you want to take, and zip them shut. Then – this is the brilliant part – you zip a second zipper to compress the insides flat. (Think of it like your expandable suitcase, when you open that second zipper, it gives you an extra inch or two of suitcase space. When you zip it shut, everything inside is compressed.)

As a bonus, the clothes you lay inside the packing cube are much more likely to stay wrinkle free. I don’t know why. But it’s true.

Stick with One Basic Color

When I head to a Caribbean resort, that color will be white. But most of the time, it’s black – black pants, a black skirt, a black dress. Then I add color in the tops I will wear with the pants and skirt. Finally, I pack a few scarves and funky costume jewelry to dress everything up or down and add more color.

Wear the Heavy Stuff on the Plane

There are plenty of TikTokers and travel hacker influencers who will tell you to wear layers and layers on the plane to save suitcase space. Or to pack a pillowcase with your stuff and pretend it’s a pillow, not a suitcase, so it doesn’t count as a carryon.

While that might be useful info for travelers on uber-budget airlines that charge for anything that doesn’t fit under your seat, you really don’t have to go that crazy. Just use a little common sense.

If, for example, you’re flying from Florida to Colorado, you know you’ll need your winter coat, hat, gloves, hiking boots and heavy jeans. Wear the jeans and hiking boots on the plane, stuff the hat and gloves in the coat pockets and carry the coat on the plane rather than packing it in a suitcase.

I do this anyway because I’m always chilly on a plane. I’m always surprised when I see someone boarding a flight in shorts and flip flops. I would be blue by the time I landed!

Think Layers, Not Bulk

Thin layers are always the right answer, no matter where you are. Even a Caribbean vacation requires preparing for chilly evenings or overly air-conditioned restaurants. Layers are the answer to staying warm and packing light.

Make the Best Use of Your Under-Seat Bag

Finally, remember that you get not one, but two things to carry onto the plane – a bag that goes into the overhead and a smaller bag that fits under the seat in front of you.

Don’t waste the space in that second bag!

My go-to is a roomy backpack because I travel with a lot of electronics – laptop, Kindle, phone, ear buds and all of the cords and accessories they require. But those only take up two zippered compartments. That leaves two more compartments for other things – makeup bag, an extra pair of shoes, etc.

The other thing that works for me is a big striped bag that is super flexible. I can cram a lot into it and still stuff it under the seat. The downside of that is it is heavy to carry, unlike my backpack which easily distributes the weight across my shoulders.

Practice, Practice, Practice

I know. This isn’t easy. Especially if you’ve always been an overpacker. But practice will make perfect. Try it on your next quick weekend trip. That will give you a chance to see how it feels to only pack what you’ll need for 2-3 days, how much you like being able to lift that light carry-on bag and how happy you are not worrying about whether your suitcase will show up at the other end of your flight.

Just remember to pack one more thing: a credit card. That way, if you find you truly can’t live without something for a few days, you can head to the store to buy it.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Are you an overpacker or an underpacker? What’s your favorite packing hack? Share with us in the comment section below.

Uncategorised

Latest

Why Your Metabolism Feels Slower in Midlife (And Why Eating Less Usually Makes It Worse)

Why Your Metabolism Feels Slower in Midlife (And Why Eating Less Usually Makes It Worse)

You’re doing the same things you’ve always done. Eating reasonably well. Getting your walks in. Trying to keep portions in check. And the scale is doing the opposite of what you’d expect.

So you land on the most logical explanation available:

“My metabolism must be broken.”

It’s a reasonable conclusion. But it’s usually the wrong one.

Most of the time, your metabolism isn’t broken. It’s responding exactly the way a human body is designed to respond – to the conditions you’ve been living in for the past several decades. Once you understand what those conditions actually are, a lot of the frustration – and honestly, a lot of the self-blame – starts to make a different kind of sense.

What’s Actually Happening to Your Metabolism

Metabolism doesn’t usually change overnight. What I see most often – with my clients and in the research – is something much quieter. A slow accumulation of small shifts over years and decades that, individually, you’d never notice.

One of the Biggest Is Muscle Loss

Muscle is metabolically active, meaning your body burns energy just to maintain it, even at rest. But many women spent their younger years steering clear of strength training. Not out of laziness. But because the cultural ideal for women’s bodies for a very long time was thin, not strong. A lot of us absorbed the message that lifting weights would make us “bulky” – and quietly avoided it for years.

When you lose muscle over time, your body simply doesn’t need as much fuel to run itself. That’s not dysfunction. That’s physics.

The Second Shift Is Daily Movement

Here I do not mean formal exercise, just the low-grade physical activity that used to fill a day. Walking more, standing more, moving between tasks. Life got more sedentary in ways that are easy to miss. Being mentally busy all day is genuinely exhausting. But the body registers something different than the brain does, and over time, those small reductions in movement add up.

Less muscle. Less daily movement. A body that burns fewer calories than it used to. None of this happened dramatically. It happened gradually – and most women never saw it coming.

The Diet History No One Talks About

Here’s the piece of the metabolism story that doesn’t get nearly enough attention.

If you’re a woman 40+, there’s a reasonable chance that dieting has been part of your life since you were a teenager. And years of cycling between restriction and eating normally has real physiological consequences – not because you did something wrong, but because that’s how the human body works.

There’s a famous piece of research called the Minnesota Starvation Study, conducted in the 1940s. Researchers restricted calories in a group of healthy young men for several months. The results were striking. The men became preoccupied with food – reading cookbooks for entertainment, dreaming about meals, talking about food constantly. Their energy dropped. Their mood destabilized. Their metabolism slowed to conserve resources.

These were psychologically healthy people. The restriction itself produced those effects.

Many women have unknowingly recreated similar conditions – not in one dramatic diet, but across years of the weekday-restriction, weekend-overeating cycle. Careful Monday through Thursday, then something gives on Friday night. Then Monday, start over.

That pattern has a cumulative effect: disrupted hunger signals, loss of lean muscle, lower baseline energy, and a brain that becomes increasingly preoccupied with food. None of that is a character flaw. It’s biology responding to conditions.

Why Eating Less and Less Eventually Backfires

When weight loss stalls – and at some point it almost always does – the instinct is predictable. Cut a little more. Maybe it’s the carbs. Maybe it’s the snacks. Maybe if you stop eating after 7pm, something will shift.

Afterall, we’ve all been taught – eat less and move more is the key. And that’s where things start to backfire.

Your body is not a calorie calculator. It’s designed for your survival. When it senses that food intake keeps dropping, it starts making adjustments: energy decreases, spontaneous movement quietly dials down, muscle breaks down to keep things running, and cravings get louder. You might find yourself standing in the kitchen at 9:30 at night thinking about something crunchy or sweet. Not because you lack discipline. Because your brain believes it’s solving a survival problem.

Eventually something gives – usually on the weekend, or at the end of a long day when the mental brakes finally come off. The scale stalls or creeps up. And you’re back to the same conclusion: “My metabolism must be broken.”

Your body’s job is not helping you fit into your jeans. Its job is keeping you alive. When it believes food is scarce, it becomes very good at protecting what it has. That’s not a malfunction. That’s the system working exactly as designed.

What Recovery Actually Looks Like

Most women are watching one signal: the scale. And if the number doesn’t move fast enough, the assumption is that nothing is happening.

But the body gives us useful information long before weight changes. Hunger becomes more predictable – you’re hungry around meals, you eat, and you’re satisfied for a few hours without white-knuckling your way through the afternoon. Energy steadies out. Cravings quiet down from emergency-level to background noise. Mood evens out. Sleep becomes more consistent.

These are the signals worth paying attention to first. They tell you the body is starting to receive what it needs. Weight loss, when it happens, tends to follow – not lead.

It May Not Be Your Fault. But Here’s What’s Yours

A lot of women land in one of two places. The first is blame: something must be wrong with me, I lack discipline, everyone else manages to figure this out. That’s not true, and it’s not a useful place to work from.

The second is: it’s not my fault – hormones, menopause, genetics, aging. There’s real truth in that. We were handed bad information for decades. Diet culture gave us rules that were never designed to support health. And that matters.

But fault and responsibility are different questions. It may not be your fault that you ended up here. What happens next is still yours to decide. And the good news is that the body is genuinely responsive when you start supporting it properly. Not overnight. But steadily.

What Actually Helps

Here’s the thing most women already know: eating enough nourishing food, moving regularly, sleeping well, and managing stress are the foundations of metabolic health. None of that is new information.

The gap isn’t knowing what to do. The gap is doing it consistently in a real, messy life – especially when the week goes sideways, stress is high, and the old patterns are right there waiting.

There’s also something worth noting about how you do those things. Two people can follow the exact same habits and have completely different experiences depending on whether they’re approaching their body as something to punish into compliance – or something to support. That shift in orientation changes more than you’d expect.

Find Out What’s Actually Getting in Your Way

If you know what healthy habits look like but can’t seem to make them stick, the problem isn’t information. It’s the specific pattern underneath your follow-through. And that pattern is different for everyone.

My quiz, Why Do Your Healthy Habits Keep Falling Apart?, takes about 3 minutes. It identifies your specific pattern and tells you what to address first. Results go straight to your inbox. No generic advice. Just a clear picture of what’s actually getting in your way.

Because once you can see the pattern, it stops feeling like a problem with your DNA – something that is part of your fiber – and it starts feeling like a problem you can actually solve. Because you can.

I’d Love to Hear from You in the Comments:

When it comes to your health habits, where do things tend to fall apart? Is it getting started, staying consistent when life gets busy, or something else entirely?

Skin Care

Latest

How to Make Your Own Essential Oil Blend for Mature Skin (Recipe)

A Basic Essential Oil Blend for Everyday Mature Skin Care

With all the wonderful natural facial serums on the market today, it can be a little overwhelming choosing the correct formula with safe, non-toxic ingredients, all at a reasonable price. The good news is that it’s easy and fun to make a quality product on your own using the miracle of nature – essential oils. 

When I started working with skincare formulas in 2003, one of the first products I was excited about making was an essential oil-based facial serum. My skin needs were changing, and a moisturizing oil made perfect sense for dry, maturing skin.

I decided to work with four wonderful healthy aging essential oils I had discovered: Lavender, Frankincense, Rose Geranium, and Carrot Seed.

The natural and highly effective nature of essential oils makes them perfect for skincare. When blended for their various properties and used with a carrier oil that matches your skin type, you can create a serum tailor-made for your skin.

What Are Essential Oils?

Essential oils are the essence of plants. Hidden away in many parts of the plant, like the flowers, seeds, and roots, they are very potent chemical compounds. They can give the plant its scent, protect it from harsh conditions, and help with pollination.

The benefits of essential oils on humans are diverse and amazing. Lavender flower oil, for example, contains compounds that help soothe skin irritation and redness, while the scent reduces feelings of anxiety and stress.

The beautiful Rose essential oil is hydrating to the skin and sometimes used to treat scarring, while the scent is known to help lift depression. 

There are many essential oils to choose from for specific skincare needs. I have used a myriad of different combinations but keep coming back to the tried and true blend from my very first serum.

The four essential oils used are the workhorses of skincare for mature skin, as well as being wonderfully uplifting for mind, body, and spirit. 

The Base Oil Blend Formula

Here’s what you’ll need:

Bottle

1 oz. amber dropper bottle. You can find those in pharmacies or online.

Base (Carrier) Oil

As a base, you can use one of the oils below or a combination of several that meet your skin’s needs:

  • Jojoba oil is my base oil of choice. It’s incredible for most skin types: it’s extremely gentle and non-irritating for sensitive skin, moisturizing for dry skin, balancing for oily skin, ideal for combination skin, and offers a barrier of protection from environmental stressors. It also helps skin glow as it delivers deep hydration.
  • Rosehip oil smooths the skin’s texture and calms redness and irritation.
  • Argan oil contains high levels of vitamin E and absorbs thoroughly into the skin leaving little oily residue.
  • Avocado oil is effective at treating age spots and sun damage, as well as helping to soothe inflammatory conditions such as blemishes and eczema.
  • Olive oil is a heavier oil and the perfect choice if your skin needs a mega-dose of hydration. Just be aware that olive oil takes longer to absorb and leaves the skin with an oily feeling. This may be desirable for extremely dry, red, itchy skin.

Essential Oils

  • Lavender essential oil is very versatile and healing. It helps reduce inflammation, kill bacteria, and clear pores. Its scent is also calming and soothing.
  • Frankincense essential oil helps to tone and strengthen mature skin in addition to fighting bacteria and balancing oil production.
  • Rose Geranium essential oil helps tighten the skin by reducing the appearance of fine lines, helps reduce inflammation and fight redness, and offers anti-bacterial benefits to help fight the occasional breakout. The scent is also known to be soothing and balancing.
  • Carrot seed oil is a fantastic essential oil for combination skin. It helps even the skin tone while reducing inflammation and increasing water retention.

The Recipe

Let’s start with a simple recipe:

  • 1 oz. Jojoba oil (or carrier oil of your choice)
  • 10 drops Lavender
  • 10 drops Frankincense
  • 10 drops Rose Geranium
  • 10 drops Carrot seed oil 

Place the essential oil drops in the amber dropper bottle then fill with Jojoba/carrier oil. It’s that simple!

Applying Your Homemade Serum

Use this serum morning and evening as part of your regular skincare routine. Serums work best when applied after cleansing your face. You can cleanse with Coconut Oil or a mixture of oils for enhanced hydration (we will cover this in the next article) or use your regular facial cleanser.

Essential oils will not interfere in any way with your normal skincare products.

Keep in mind that the serum is concentrated. Use only a pea-sized amount, work it into your fingertips, and apply evenly over the face without tugging or pulling.

If your skin feels tacky, reduce the amount on the next application. Your skin should feel soft, not oily. Follow with your regular moisturizer if you like. 

Making your own facial serum is fun and rewarding! I look forward to hearing your thoughts and ideas on essential oils and making personalized serums and skincare.

What facial serum do you use? Have you made one yourself? What is your favorite essential oil for skin care? Please share your thoughts with our community!

Why Your Metabolism Feels Slower in Midlife (And Why Eating Less Usually Makes It Worse)

Why Your Metabolism Feels Slower in Midlife (And Why Eating Less Usually Makes It Worse)

You’re doing the same things you’ve always done. Eating reasonably well. Getting your walks in. Trying to keep portions in check. And the scale is doing the opposite of what you’d expect.

So you land on the most logical explanation available:

“My metabolism must be broken.”

It’s a reasonable conclusion. But it’s usually the wrong one.

Most of the time, your metabolism isn’t broken. It’s responding exactly the way a human body is designed to respond – to the conditions you’ve been living in for the past several decades. Once you understand what those conditions actually are, a lot of the frustration – and honestly, a lot of the self-blame – starts to make a different kind of sense.

What’s Actually Happening to Your Metabolism

Metabolism doesn’t usually change overnight. What I see most often – with my clients and in the research – is something much quieter. A slow accumulation of small shifts over years and decades that, individually, you’d never notice.

One of the Biggest Is Muscle Loss

Muscle is metabolically active, meaning your body burns energy just to maintain it, even at rest. But many women spent their younger years steering clear of strength training. Not out of laziness. But because the cultural ideal for women’s bodies for a very long time was thin, not strong. A lot of us absorbed the message that lifting weights would make us “bulky” – and quietly avoided it for years.

When you lose muscle over time, your body simply doesn’t need as much fuel to run itself. That’s not dysfunction. That’s physics.

The Second Shift Is Daily Movement

Here I do not mean formal exercise, just the low-grade physical activity that used to fill a day. Walking more, standing more, moving between tasks. Life got more sedentary in ways that are easy to miss. Being mentally busy all day is genuinely exhausting. But the body registers something different than the brain does, and over time, those small reductions in movement add up.

Less muscle. Less daily movement. A body that burns fewer calories than it used to. None of this happened dramatically. It happened gradually – and most women never saw it coming.

The Diet History No One Talks About

Here’s the piece of the metabolism story that doesn’t get nearly enough attention.

If you’re a woman 40+, there’s a reasonable chance that dieting has been part of your life since you were a teenager. And years of cycling between restriction and eating normally has real physiological consequences – not because you did something wrong, but because that’s how the human body works.

There’s a famous piece of research called the Minnesota Starvation Study, conducted in the 1940s. Researchers restricted calories in a group of healthy young men for several months. The results were striking. The men became preoccupied with food – reading cookbooks for entertainment, dreaming about meals, talking about food constantly. Their energy dropped. Their mood destabilized. Their metabolism slowed to conserve resources.

These were psychologically healthy people. The restriction itself produced those effects.

Many women have unknowingly recreated similar conditions – not in one dramatic diet, but across years of the weekday-restriction, weekend-overeating cycle. Careful Monday through Thursday, then something gives on Friday night. Then Monday, start over.

That pattern has a cumulative effect: disrupted hunger signals, loss of lean muscle, lower baseline energy, and a brain that becomes increasingly preoccupied with food. None of that is a character flaw. It’s biology responding to conditions.

Why Eating Less and Less Eventually Backfires

When weight loss stalls – and at some point it almost always does – the instinct is predictable. Cut a little more. Maybe it’s the carbs. Maybe it’s the snacks. Maybe if you stop eating after 7pm, something will shift.

Afterall, we’ve all been taught – eat less and move more is the key. And that’s where things start to backfire.

Your body is not a calorie calculator. It’s designed for your survival. When it senses that food intake keeps dropping, it starts making adjustments: energy decreases, spontaneous movement quietly dials down, muscle breaks down to keep things running, and cravings get louder. You might find yourself standing in the kitchen at 9:30 at night thinking about something crunchy or sweet. Not because you lack discipline. Because your brain believes it’s solving a survival problem.

Eventually something gives – usually on the weekend, or at the end of a long day when the mental brakes finally come off. The scale stalls or creeps up. And you’re back to the same conclusion: “My metabolism must be broken.”

Your body’s job is not helping you fit into your jeans. Its job is keeping you alive. When it believes food is scarce, it becomes very good at protecting what it has. That’s not a malfunction. That’s the system working exactly as designed.

What Recovery Actually Looks Like

Most women are watching one signal: the scale. And if the number doesn’t move fast enough, the assumption is that nothing is happening.

But the body gives us useful information long before weight changes. Hunger becomes more predictable – you’re hungry around meals, you eat, and you’re satisfied for a few hours without white-knuckling your way through the afternoon. Energy steadies out. Cravings quiet down from emergency-level to background noise. Mood evens out. Sleep becomes more consistent.

These are the signals worth paying attention to first. They tell you the body is starting to receive what it needs. Weight loss, when it happens, tends to follow – not lead.

It May Not Be Your Fault. But Here’s What’s Yours

A lot of women land in one of two places. The first is blame: something must be wrong with me, I lack discipline, everyone else manages to figure this out. That’s not true, and it’s not a useful place to work from.

The second is: it’s not my fault – hormones, menopause, genetics, aging. There’s real truth in that. We were handed bad information for decades. Diet culture gave us rules that were never designed to support health. And that matters.

But fault and responsibility are different questions. It may not be your fault that you ended up here. What happens next is still yours to decide. And the good news is that the body is genuinely responsive when you start supporting it properly. Not overnight. But steadily.

What Actually Helps

Here’s the thing most women already know: eating enough nourishing food, moving regularly, sleeping well, and managing stress are the foundations of metabolic health. None of that is new information.

The gap isn’t knowing what to do. The gap is doing it consistently in a real, messy life – especially when the week goes sideways, stress is high, and the old patterns are right there waiting.

There’s also something worth noting about how you do those things. Two people can follow the exact same habits and have completely different experiences depending on whether they’re approaching their body as something to punish into compliance – or something to support. That shift in orientation changes more than you’d expect.

Find Out What’s Actually Getting in Your Way

If you know what healthy habits look like but can’t seem to make them stick, the problem isn’t information. It’s the specific pattern underneath your follow-through. And that pattern is different for everyone.

My quiz, Why Do Your Healthy Habits Keep Falling Apart?, takes about 3 minutes. It identifies your specific pattern and tells you what to address first. Results go straight to your inbox. No generic advice. Just a clear picture of what’s actually getting in your way.

Because once you can see the pattern, it stops feeling like a problem with your DNA – something that is part of your fiber – and it starts feeling like a problem you can actually solve. Because you can.

I’d Love to Hear from You in the Comments:

When it comes to your health habits, where do things tend to fall apart? Is it getting started, staying consistent when life gets busy, or something else entirely?

Read More

Commencement Speeches: The Graduation Advice We Were Too Young to Appreciate

Why Your Metabolism Feels Slower in Midlife (And Why Eating Less Usually Makes It Worse)

There is something delightfully ironic about commencement speeches. At the exact moment people are least interested in sitting still and listening, some notable steps up to a podium and delivers a carefully crafted sermon about life, purpose, resilience, and possibility.

After spending more than a decade of my midlife career as a school administrator, I have attended enough graduation ceremonies to earn an honorary doctorate in uncomfortable folding chairs and ceremonial polyester. I have heard the soaring metaphors, the inspirational anecdotes, the encouragement to strive, and endless references to “journeys.”

Most graduates, understandably, are too busy thinking about dinner reservations, student loan payments, or where the after-party is happening to fully absorb the wisdom being handed down from the stage.

But lately, I’ve started to think commencement speeches may have been written for women over 60 all along.

Maybe This Is Our Real Graduation

If there is any group of people standing on the edge of a wide-open, uncertain, exciting next chapter, it’s us. Women in later life are reinventing careers, leaving marriages, launching businesses, downsizing homes, traveling solo, dating again, relocating, caregiving, retiring, unretiring, or simply asking themselves the big question that feels both thrilling and terrifying:

What now?

The Surprisingly Poignant Wisdom of Roger Federer

That question hit me recently while researching a story about retirement reinvention and stumbling across Roger Federer’s 2024 commencement address at Dartmouth College.

There he was, arguably one of the greatest athletes of all time, admitting that he, too, was figuring out his next steps. “Like you,” he told graduates, “I’m figuring out what that is.”

Honestly? That may be the most comforting thing any post-60 woman can hear, because somewhere along the line, society decided that older women are supposed to have arrived already. We’re expected to know exactly who we are, what we want, how to do Medicare enrollment without tearing out our hair, and what we should wear to stay stylish in the process.

Many of us are not winding down. Instead we are waking up to a wide-open landscape, and that’s exactly why commencement speeches suddenly resonate with us. When we listen through the lens of a woman entering her next act, the messages become surprisingly relevant. The themes are timeless: choose courage over comfort, remain curious, stay connected, expect setbacks, keep growing anyway.

Why “Yes… And” Feels Like the Perfect Midlife Philosophy

In her 2012 address at Smith College, Jane Lynch spoke about the improvisational principle of “Yes… and.” The idea is simple: accept what life hands you, and then build from it. Don’t resist. Don’t deny. And definitely don’t spend years wishing things had gone differently.

“Yes… and.”

It feels like the perfect philosophy for later life. Yes, our lives may not look exactly as we imagined at 25… and maybe that’s not a tragedy. Maybe the divorce becomes freedom. Maybe the empty nest becomes possibility. Maybe the layoff becomes the business idea. Maybe the loss becomes the thing that finally teaches us how precious time really is. Lynch’s advice feels especially meaningful for women stepping into unfamiliar territory after decades spent taking care of everyone else first.

Reinvention Requires a Little Foolishness

Starting over requires a willingness to look foolish occasionally, which is unfortunate because many of us spent our 50s trying very hard not to.

Which brings us, naturally, to Steve Jobs and his legendary 2005 commencement address at Stanford University, which remains iconic for one enduring line: “Stay hungry. Stay foolish.”

That line lands differently after 60, too.

Because being “foolish” at this age might mean signing up for the painting class, launching the Substack, wearing the sequined skirt, taking the solo trip, learning pickleball, falling in love again, or admitting you still want more from life.

And hunger? That’s not something to apologize for but instead is an invitation to become more ourselves than ever before?

More curious.

More expressive.

More daring.

More alive.

Maybe that’s why commencement speeches resonate now in a way they never did at 22. At this age, we understand that reinvention is not a straight line. We know failure is both inevitable and survivable. We appreciate the value of friendships, resilience, humor, and good habits around wearing sunscreen and making movement part of our daily routine. Mostly, we understand that possibility does not have an expiration date, and neither do we.

So perhaps we should start treating this chapter like our own private commencement ceremony – minus the polyester robes and ridiculous caps.

That deserves a standing ovation.

A Few More Commencement Speeches Worth Revisiting

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Which commencement speeches have held the most meaning for you? Have you made a graduation speech?

Read More

Lindsay Hubbard’s Yellow Zip Up Cardigan and Shorts

Lindsay Hubbard’s Yellow Zip Up Cardigan and Shorts / Summer House Instagram Fashion May 2026

I truly cannot grasp the fact that the In The City premiere is a mere week away! And I’m very much excited for that because of the obvious new show energy, but also because the cast is doing press rounds. Like here with Lindsay Hubbard and Kyle Cooke where Lindsay is wearing this gorgeous yellow zip front cardigan look. It’s a whole look that you will def want In The Closet.

Sincerely Stylish,

Jess


Lindsay Hubbard's Yellow Zip Up Cardigan and Shorts

Click Here to Shop Additional Stock of Her Cardigan / Click Here to Shop Additional Stock of Her Shorts

Photo + Info: @bravotv


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Originally posted at: Lindsay Hubbard’s Yellow Zip Up Cardigan and Shorts

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Kyle Richards Evil Eye Print Blouse

Kyle Richards Evil Eye Print Blouse / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Instagram Fashion May 2026

Kyle Richards’ wardrobe is our safe place when looking for a bold blouse to pair with denim. And simply put, the evil-eye-print she wore on Amazon Live sure to have all eyes on you the second you walk in (literally).

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Kyle Richards Evil Eye Print Blouse

Photo: @kylerichards18


Style Stealers

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Originally posted at: Kyle Richards Evil Eye Print Blouse

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Levi Sebree’s Season 10 Reunion Look

Levi Sebree’s Season 10 Reunion Look / Summer House Fashion Season 10

Levi Sebree finished her first season on Summer House in an iconic green sequin dress. She left no notes for the reunion in this chic dress that catches the light beautifully. This may be our first post on our girl Levi, but that’s because this bold dress tops all of the other looks we’ve seen from her this season. So if you want your style to stand out and speak for itself, sparkle like the star you are with this stunning dress that’s fully in stock.

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Levi Sebree's Season 10 Reunion Look

Photo + Info: Bravo TV


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Seen on #SummerHouse




Originally posted at: Levi Sebree’s Season 10 Reunion Look

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Why You Miss People from Work You Were Never That Close To

Why You Miss People from Work You Were Never That Close To

Last Thursday night, I found myself at a hotel bar at 10pm. I was very proud of myself for staying up so late. I know, I know – retirement means I don’t have to get up early. But the truth is, I’m an early-to-bed kind of person.

I was out with my cousin, who was visiting from Boston and is significantly more of a night owl than I am. We’d been to a comedy club. And I didn’t want to disappoint her by getting home too early. So I suggested one cocktail at a swanky nearby hotel, and off we went.

When we arrived at the bar, I noticed them immediately: a large group of people from a conference. You could tell because they were still wearing name tags, all from the same organization. Different ages, different backgrounds, all animated and talking over each other in that particular way people do at the end of a conference day – full of ideas, loose from the cocktails, glad to finally be out of the session rooms.

The women had clustered together at one end of the bar. The men were at the other. Everyone was in full networking mode.

I watched them for a moment and felt something I didn’t quite expect.

Not envy, exactly. Not nostalgia. I found myself thinking about all the conferences I used to attend – the nice hotels in fun cities, the cocktail hours I always dreaded walking into, the colleagues from across the country I’d see once or twice a year. And I realized: I don’t miss the conferences. But I do miss what they gave me.

That distinction took me a while to understand.

The Social Connection That Came with the Job

When I worked at a university, I traveled to conferences regularly. Over the years, I became friendly with colleagues from across the country. We’d catch up on each other’s projects. We’d hear about each other’s families. We’d have dinner and laugh and feel, for a few days, like we were part of a larger community of people who cared about the same things.

Back at the college, there were the people I saw daily – teammates and collaborators I’d spent years working alongside. I knew what stage their kids were in. Eventually what colleges the kids were applying to. I knew who was going through something hard and who had just gotten exciting news. That daily contact felt genuinely good. The kind of easy, built-in connection that doesn’t require any effort to maintain. It’s just… there.

What I didn’t fully understand until I retired was how many of my daily social needs had been met by my job – the sense of being known, of seeing familiar faces, of having people around who were glad to see me – without me having to seek any of it out.

Looking back now, almost a year into retirement, I can see honestly that I don’t have friendships with most of those people anymore. I enjoyed the relationships while I had them. I liked those people. But the relationships were situational. They existed because we worked together, traveled together, shared a professional context. Like being friendly with a neighbor – warm and real while it lasts, but not something that typically survives a move.

That’s not a criticism of those relationships. It’s just an accurate description of what they were.

Why This Happens — and Why No One Warns You

Repeated contact with the same people tends to create liking – even without deep conversations or shared values. Simply being around the same people regularly – in meetings, in the hallway, at the coffee machine – builds a sense of familiarity and warmth over time.

Work supplied this effortlessly. And along with it came something else that’s easy to overlook: the everyday, low-key moments that make you feel like you exist in someone else’s world. The colleague who always says good morning. The team that knows the inside joke. The person who asks how the weekend was and actually remembers what you said. These aren’t deep friendships. But they create a steady sense of being seen. Work provided them for free.

Studies show that retirement itself doesn’t cause loneliness. But it removes the structure that was providing connection – and eventually we figure out which relationships were deep enough to survive outside of work.

Most of us don’t realize how much of our daily social connection had been built into work – until the workday disappears.

The Checkout Clerk Moment

I’ll be honest about something that’s a little hard to admit.

There are days in retirement when I make more effort to chat with the checkout clerk at the supermarket than I ever did when I was working – because sometimes that’s my main social interaction outside of time with my husband.

If it sounds a little sad, it is a little sad. And I think it’s more common than most of us let on.

Retirement hands you unstructured time where the workday used to be. And what you discover, standing in that open space, is exactly how much of your daily sense of connection was built into the schedule.

What Chosen Connection Actually Looks Like

A few months into retirement, two friends had the idea to bring together a group of women they thought might enjoy each other. The five of us started getting together for dinner once a month. We named ourselves after the first initial of each of our names and call ourselves the WACKE Pack.

We’re slowly getting to know each other. We’ve made art together, gone on e-bike rides, played games. There’s an innocence and hopefulness to it – women in their late 50s and 60s intentionally building friendship at this stage of life.

What we’re building is different. It’s slower. It requires more initiation. But there’s something more solid about it – because we actually picked each other. Nobody has to be there.

A study found it takes roughly 50 hours of time together to move from acquaintance to casual friend, and more than 200 hours to develop a close friendship. Here’s the part worth sitting with: hours spent working together don’t count as much. The work time built familiarity – but it wasn’t accumulating toward the kind of closeness that outlasts a career.

That explains a lot, doesn’t it?

Where to Start

A few things have helped me and the women I work with:

Start with an Honest Audit

Look at the connections in your life right now. Which ones exist because of proximity or circumstance – a job, a neighborhood, an organization? And which ones would survive a retirement or a major life change? That gap is worth knowing. It’s not a depressing exercise. It’s a clarifying one.

Don’t Wait Until You Feel the Absence

The best time to build new connections is before you feel acutely lonely. If you’re still working, start thinking now about which relationships you’d want to invest in and carry forward.

Start Low-Stakes

You don’t need to find your new best friend immediately. A class, a club, a regular volunteer commitment – anything that creates repeated contact with the same people over time. The WACKE Pack didn’t become close overnight. We’re still becoming.

Let Someone Connect You

One of the most effective ways to meet people at this stage is through someone who already knows you both. Tell the people in your life that you’re looking. That’s how the WACKE Pack started for me. It changed things.

The connection you want in this chapter isn’t going to arrive automatically the way it did at work. But it can be built — deliberately, at whatever pace feels right for you.

If you’re also navigating the identity questions that come with this transition – the “who am I now that work isn’t defining me?” piece — I wrote about that too: Why Retirement Feels Harder for High-Achieving Women.

A First Step

This chapter takes time to design. And the social piece is one of the most underestimated parts.

If you’re navigating this – whether you’ve recently retired, you’re still deciding, or you’re a few years in and still finding your footing – my free Retirement Vision Starter Kit is a good place to begin. It’s a short, guided reflection to help you get honest about what you want this next chapter to actually feel like – in your relationships, your daily life, your sense of purpose, and the experiences that make you feel most alive. It takes about 20 minutes, and most women tell me something shifts just from working through it.

Here’s what’s inside:

  • A guided reflection on how you want to feel in your relationships – and what’s missing.
  • Questions to help you name what you want more of and what first step might get you there.
  • Space to get clear on your daily rhythms, sense of purpose, and what a genuinely fulfilling day looks like.
  • A section to capture the vision you’re starting to build.

👉 Download the free Retirement Vision Starter Kit

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What’s one social connection from your working years you miss more than you expected – or one you’ve been intentionally trying to build since retiring? I’d love to hear in the comments.

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