Month: February 2026

The Secret to Real Confidence After 60? Trust Your Feelings

The Secret to Real Confidence After 60 Trust Your Feelings

For much of my life, I believed confidence meant keeping my emotions in check.

Stay calm. Don’t let them see you sweat. Push through.

Many women of our generation were taught this early on. We learned to be capable, composed, and reliable – often at the expense of our inner lives. Emotions were something to manage privately, if at all.

But after four decades as a healthcare attorney and years immersed in the science of well-being, I’ve learned something both surprising and deeply freeing:

Our feelings aren’t a weakness. They are the foundation of true confidence.

The Confidence Myth Many of Us Inherited

Most of us grew up hearing messages like “Don’t be so emotional” or “Keep your feelings to yourself.” Over time, those messages became internal rules. We carried them into our careers, our marriages, our parenting, and our friendships.

We became experts at pushing feelings aside – especially the inconvenient ones.

What many of us didn’t realize is that those habits came at a cost. When we disconnect from our feelings, it’s hard to feel confident in someone we no longer fully know.

One of the most powerful things I’ve found is simply naming those old messages. Writing them down. Seeing them on the page for what they are – rules that were handed to us, not truths we chose. In the companion workbook to my book From Chains to Wings, one of the very first exercises invites you to do exactly this. It’s a small act, but loosening the grip of old beliefs is where real change begins.

Feelings Are Information, Not Problems

Every emotion you experience is meaningful. It’s your body’s way of communicating with you.

That nervous flutter before speaking up? It tells you something matters. That irritation when you feel dismissed? It’s pointing to a boundary. Those unexpected tears during a quiet moment? They may be asking for attention you’ve postponed for years.

When we learn to listen rather than override these signals, something shifts. We begin to trust ourselves again. And self-trust – not bravado or certainty – is the deepest form of confidence there is.

This understanding became central to my own healing journey and inspired my book From Chains to Wings: A Poetry Revolution for Healing. Poetry has a unique ability to give language to feelings we often struggle to name. When words reflect our inner experience, we feel seen – even by ourselves.

The workbook extends this with a daily practice I love: a simple journal prompt that asks, “What did I feel today that I almost ignored?” Revisited regularly – over morning coffee, before bed, whenever suits you– that one question can quietly transform your relationship with your inner life.

A Simple Practice That Changes Everything

In my work with women, I often share a simple framework I call Feel-Pause-Act. It’s gentle, practical, and especially helpful in this season of life.

Feel

When an emotion arises, acknowledge it. Name it quietly: “I’m feeling anxious,” or “I notice sadness here.” There’s no need to judge or explain it away. Simply noticing is powerful – especially for those of us who learned to skip this step entirely. Sometimes the hardest part is finding the right word. Having that language for our emotions makes all the difference.

Pause

Take a breath. Or two. This pause isn’t about fixing the feeling. It’s about letting your nervous system settle. Even a few slow breaths can create space – space where choice becomes possible. Try it anywhere – in your car, before a difficult conversation, even standing in line at the store.

Act

From that steadier place, choose how you want to respond. Not from habit or pressure, but in a way that honors both your feelings and your values.

This practice works just as well for small daily moments as it does for big life decisions – the phone call that rattled you, the comment that stung, the decision you keep going back and forth on. The workbook gives you a simple tracking tool so you can use Feel-Pause-Act throughout your day and begin noticing your own patterns. Over time, you’ll see which emotions show up most, what triggers them, and how your responses start to shift. That awareness itself is a form of confidence.

Why Emotional Confidence Matters More After 60

By this stage of life, we’ve lived a lot. We’ve loved, lost, adapted, and endured. Our feelings now carry decades of wisdom.

Yet many women still question themselves. Am I overreacting? Shouldn’t I be past this by now?

Here’s what I know to be true: your emotional responses are not random or excessive. They are shaped by everything you’ve experienced – and that history deserves respect.

For many women, earlier years were spent caring for others while postponing their own needs. After 60, there’s a quiet invitation to come home to yourself. To ask, perhaps for the first time:

What do I feel? What do I need? What do I want now?

These questions aren’t selfish. They’re restorative. And the workbook gives you a safe, private space to sit with them honestly – at your own kitchen table, on your own terms, at whatever pace feels right.

Start Where You Are

You don’t need to overhaul your relationship with emotions overnight. Begin with something simple.

The next time you feel something strongly – joy, irritation, sadness, excitement – pause and acknowledge it:

“I feel this.”

That’s enough.

If you want to go deeper, try asking gently, “What is this feeling trying to tell me?” Write a few lines if that feels helpful. Or simply sit with the question over your morning coffee. The workbook is designed for exactly this kind of daily exploration – it meets you wherever you are and offers a practical next step whenever you’re ready for one.

Over time, this practice builds self-trust. And self-trust is the quiet confidence that doesn’t need to prove anything. It doesn’t rush. It doesn’t perform. It simply knows.

From Chains to Wings

For years, many of us believed confidence meant controlling our emotions. What I’ve discovered instead is this:

Confidence grows when we stop fighting our feelings and start listening to them.

Your emotions have walked beside you through every chapter of your life. They’ve protected you, guided you, and revealed what matters most. When you honor them now, you honor your entire story.

And that’s how chains become wings – not by resisting what we feel, but by allowing our feelings to show us the way forward.

As you read this, notice what you’re feeling right now. No need to change it. Just notice. That, too, is confidence taking root.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What emotions do you usually suppress and why? If you let your guard down, how would you express them? Do you think writing down your emotions would help you learn more about yourself and gain confidence?

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The Surprising Benefits of Saying No

The Surprising Benefits of Saying No

I had lunch with a dear friend the other day. We live far away from each other but make the effort to meet up a few times a month. I could tell she was stressed about something, and it took some effort before she finally told me why. She felt she had to travel to Europe for her granddaughter’s birthday, even though she clearly didn’t want to go. The plane ticket was expensive, and the flight was a long haul she dreaded. On top of these, she’d have to stay in a hotel, and only to see her granddaughter for a day or two.

As she talked, it was obvious she felt trapped between what she wanted and what she thought she should do. I hear stories like this often, especially from older friends. People agree to things they don’t really want to do. It rarely goes well. Most of the time, they feel stressed beforehand, and disappointed afterward. Then they quietly shame themselves for saying yes in the first place.

Rethinking Why We Say Yes When We Mean No

We all need to rethink saying no. Even though the word is usually framed as negative, it shouldn’t be. If someone asked you to step into busy traffic, you would say no without hesitation. If someone asked you to climb Everest or trek to the South Pole, most of us would also say no, not because those experiences are bad, but because they are not right for us. Saying no in those situations feels sensible and responsible.

Yet when it comes to family obligations, social invitations, or expectations placed on us by others, saying no suddenly feels uncomfortable. It becomes loaded with guilt, worry, and self-doubt. Saying no is not negative. It is honest. It shows self-respect and emotional maturity. It does not mean you are selfish, cold, or isolating yourself from others.

Why Obligation Gets in the Way

Many of us say yes because obligation gets in the way. Sometimes we feel we are being asked out of politeness, and we don’t want to disappoint. Other times, people ask because it suits their needs, without fully considering our situation.

I see this often here on the island. People invite others to join cruises or outings because they need a certain number to make it affordable. Friends say yes to dinners they cannot comfortably afford, then spend the following weeks cutting back on necessities. Others agree to host visitors in already small homes instead of suggesting nearby accommodation that would likely suit everyone better.

We often focus on what we think others want us to say, rather than what is best for us. We forget to ask ourselves some very simple questions. Do I want to do this? Can I do this physically, emotionally, or financially? Just because we can do something does not mean we should.

The 4 Surprising Benefits of Saying No

#1: Reduces Stress

One of the most surprising benefits of saying no is how much stress it eliminates. Committing to something you don’t want to do, or something that stretches you beyond your limits, creates ongoing tension. That stress doesn’t disappear once you say yes. It follows you right up to the moment you have to show up and often lingers long after.

#2: Protects Self-Respect

Saying yes to something you know you cannot realistically manage chips away at self-respect. It means ignoring your own feelings, abilities, and needs. Over time, this becomes a form of self-shaming, where you set yourself up for exhaustion or disappointment. When we respect our own limits, we teach others how to respect them as well.

#3: Allows Honesty

There is something deeply freeing about being honest. When you say no calmly and sincerely, you may find the other person is relieved. They may have felt obligated to ask, or assumed you would automatically disagree. Honest answers create clearer, healthier relationships. It removes the unspoken resentment that can build when we say yes out of obligation.

#4: Makes Room for What Matters

Perhaps the greatest benefit of saying no is that it creates space. Space for rest, for joy, and for the things you truly want to do. It feels far better to look forward to something you have chosen, than to dread something you felt pressured into. Saying no allows you to shape your time in a way that reflects who you are now, not who you used to be, or who others expect you to be.

Sometimes saying no is not about turning away from people. It is about turning toward yourself, with honesty and kindness.

Click for free access to my Substack, Retired Way Out There, where I publish a bi-monthly newsletter and provide handouts.

Let’s Chat:

When was the last time you said yes to something you wanted to decline? How did you feel afterwards? In what situations saying no has helped you keep yourself together?

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Sutton Stracke’s White Floral Strapless Bustier Top

Sutton Stracke’s White Floral Strapless Bustier Top / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 8 Fashion

Sutton Stracke may not have stood up at this lunch for us to see her full ‘fit last night on #RHOBH. But we still got what we needed and tracked down the white floral strapless corset top she was wearing. It’s a great summer style which is sort of just around the corner. So don’t be “lazy” and get a head start on shopping for it starting with a new top!

Sincerely Stylish,

Jess


Sutton Stracke's White Floral Strapless Bustier Top

Style Stealers

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Originally posted at: Sutton Stracke’s White Floral Strapless Bustier Top

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Kyle Richards’ Chevron Pleated Skirt

Kyle Richards’ Chevron Pleated Skirt / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 8 Fashion

As someone who is currently planning a wedding, finalizing a venue 1 month out is just crazy to me!!! But that’s just what Kyle Richards did last night on #RHOBH for her daughter Alexia Umanksi. She also wore this chevron pleated skirt which I thought nailed the unique vibe of the space. I thought it was a fun piece to brighten up an outfit, which is why I’m sure you have the Mau-mentum to shop something similar (P.S. seriously Mauricio???). 

Sincerely Stylish,

Jess


Kyle Richards' Chevron Pleated Skirt

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Originally posted at: Kyle Richards’ Chevron Pleated Skirt

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Rachel Zoe’s White Pinstriped Top + Pants

Rachel Zoe’s White Pinstriped Top + Pants / Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Episode 8 Fashion

Rachel Zoe is a major fashionista so she clearly knows style. Which is why I was happy to see her rocking her own brand tonight on #RHOBH in her white pinstriped top and pants. Though seeing they were no longer available to shop was a bit of a downer, knowing we found Style Stealers of it below certainly helped! 

Sincerely Stylish,

Jess


Rachel Zoe's White Pinstriped Top + Pants

Click Here to Shop Additional Stock of Her Necklace


Style Stealers

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Originally posted at: Rachel Zoe’s White Pinstriped Top + Pants

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