woman starting over at 50 sitting at kitchen table with laptop and coffee
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Starting Over at 50+ Isn’t What I Expected

Estimated read time: 5 minutes  |  Category: Career & Reinvention  |  Tag: starting over at 50


The Day Everything Changed

The day Morgan got laid off, she didn’t go home and update her resume.

She went home and sat in her car in the driveway for twenty minutes because she couldn’t figure out what else to do. Then she went inside, changed into the softest pants she owned, and called her sister.

She didn’t even cry right away. That’s the thing about shock — it doesn’t always arrive as tears. Sometimes it just settles over you like a fog, quiet and disorienting, making ordinary things feel slightly unreal. Morgan walked around her kitchen opening and closing cabinets, not hungry, not looking for anything in particular. She made tea she didn’t drink. She sat on the couch and watched three episodes of a show she’d already seen and couldn’t have told you a single thing that happened.

Twenty-five years. Twenty-five years, and they handed it back to her on a Thursday afternoon in a cardboard box and a severance packet.

Her sister came over that night. They ordered Thai food and opened a bottle of wine that was maybe a little nicer than a Thursday called for, and Morgan cried then — really cried — the kind that surprises you with how much is stored up inside it. Her sister sat with her through all of it, which is the only right thing to do when someone is crying those kinds of tears.

two women talking over wine, supporting a friend through career change

The Fog Nobody Talks About

The next few days were their own particular blur. I heard from her here and there — a text, a phone call where I could tell she was still wandering, still untethered. She was still in her pajamas at two in the afternoon, not out of laziness, but because getting dressed felt like agreeing that the day was real and happening, and she wasn’t quite there yet.

She’d built something at that company. She’d given it decades of herself — her instincts, her institutional knowledge, her patience with the people who needed extra patience. She was the one colleagues called when things went sideways and they needed someone steady. She knew where everything was buried, who to call, how to smooth the rough edges that no one else even noticed anymore.

You don’t just absorb a loss like that and bounce back in an afternoon. You sit with it for a while. You let it be real.

woman in pajamas looking out window, job loss after 50

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The Day She Finally Opened the Laptop

Eventually — a week or so later, maybe a little more — Morgan opened the laptop.

Not because she was ready. I’m not sure she was ready. But she’s the kind of person who, once she decides to move, moves. And she’d decided. So there she was, sitting at her kitchen table on a Tuesday morning with fresh coffee she actually intended to drink, opening up a job search site for the first time in twenty-five years.

I’ve known Morgan long enough to know that she does not rattle easily. She’s the friend who shows up before you even know you need her, who remembers the small things, who has a laugh that fills a room and makes everyone in it feel like they’re in on something good. She also has, tucked quietly beneath all that warmth, a spine of pure steel.

But sitting there, staring at the little box that said ‘upload your resume,’ she told me later she felt like a teenager. Like someone who had never applied for anything in her life.

The rules had changed while she was busy being excellent. That’s the thing nobody warns you about when you’re starting over at 50. She’d spent twenty-five years building trust that lived in the invisible space between her and the work — the kind of trust you can’t put in a document. People knew Morgan. They knew her instincts were good. They knew that when she said we might have a problem, you dropped everything and listened. None of that fits in a text box. None of that survives an algorithm.

She stared at the summary section for a long time. She typed Dynamic finance professional with a proven track record of— and deleted it. Typed it again. Deleted it. Her coffee went cold anyway.

She texted me a screenshot of a resume template. “Is this what people do now? Tell me honestly.”

I told her yes, that’s what people do now. I also told her to call me when she wanted a second set of eyes. Because that’s the other thing about this season of starting over — you can’t do it alone, and you shouldn’t have to

resume on laptop screen, career reinvention over 50

What Morgan Is Learning

She’s still in the middle of it, honestly. Some days feel like progress. Some days she closes the laptop by noon and takes a long walk and has to remind herself — out loud, the way you sometimes do — that twenty-five years of being genuinely excellent doesn’t disappear because a company reorganized. That her value was never actually the job’s to give or take away.

But every morning, Morgan opens the laptop.

And if you’re somewhere in that first foggy week right now, still in your softest pants, not ready to open anything yet — that’s okay too. Stay there as long as you need to. The laptop will wait. And when you’re ready, we’ll be right here.

💚  Are you navigating a career transition or stepping back into the job market after years in one place? Come tell us about it in the comments — the fog, the pajamas, all of it. You’re in good company here.


Frequently Asked Questions About Starting Over at 50

woman taking time for herself from job loss after 50

Give yourself a few days before you do anything. The shock of job loss — especially after a long tenure — is real, and it deserves space. Call a friend or family member, let yourself feel it, and resist the pressure to immediately “get back out there.” The job search will still be there in a week. Your emotional footing matters more right now

A clipboard with a resume beside a pen and laptop to write a resume

Start by focusing on accomplishments rather than job duties. Think about problems you solved, teams you led, and results you produced. Because so much of long-tenure expertise lives in institutional knowledge that’s hard to quantify, it helps to ask a trusted colleague or friend to help you see what you’ve actually built. Resume templates have also changed significantly — a quick search for current formats is worth your time, and there’s no shame in learning the new language.

woman feeling grief from job loss after 50

There’s no set timeline. For many people, especially those who spent decades in one role, job loss can feel like a genuine grief process — because it is. You’re mourning not just a paycheck but an identity, a community, and a daily sense of purpose. Be patient with yourself. Most people start to find their footing within a few weeks to a few months, but the feelings can resurface during the job search itself.

Thoughtful Asian women in casual clothes drinking cups of beverage building community following job loss after 50

First, know that you are not imagining it — and you are not alone. Many women navigating this transition describe feeling suddenly unseen after years of being the person people relied on. Connecting with others going through the same thing (communities like Tools to Thrive Today exist for exactly this reason) can make a real difference. Rebuilding confidence often happens one small step at a time: updating your LinkedIn, reaching out to one former colleague, sending one application.


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