EPISODE · Dec 3, 2025 · 4 MIN
Blooming After 40: Nurturing Your Passions Like a Bonsai
from Women Over 40 · host Inception Point AI
This is your Women Over 40 podcast. Welcome back to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the power of reinvention and second acts. I'm your host, and today we're talking about something that might feel scary but is absolutely transformative: pursuing new passions after 40. Let me tell you about Shinde, a woman who spent her twenties and thirties climbing the professional ladder as a costume design assistant in Mumbai. She had stability, independence, and everything society told her she should want. But somewhere in her thirties, a quiet restlessness began to emerge. She found herself questioning whether marriage was really the defining milestone she'd been led to believe it was. At 40, people around her started asking why she hadn't settled down yet. Instead of shrinking back, Shinde made a different choice. She decided her 40s would be about exploration and creativity on her own terms. Everything changed on a trip to Malaysia when she stumbled upon a horticulture exhibition. She saw bonsais arranged like poems in pots, terrariums holding miniature worlds, and something inside her bloomed. She returned home and approached her cousin about reviving their family nursery. Even when inspiration felt distant, she showed up with a notebook and pen, sitting among the plants until her curiosity returned. She started experimenting with small decorative houseplants in coconut shells. What began as a quiet project became Ashokvatika Nursery, and now she's presenting her business at networking collectives and learning about sensory gardens and artificial intelligence in plant care. Or consider Rochelle Potkar, an award-winning author and performance poet who felt a profound shift in her 40s. She describes entering what she calls the macro-journey, the longer winding road of life that demands perspective rather than urgency. Rochelle gave up thinking in short-term timeframes and became what she calls a journeywoman. In her 40s, she's pitching movie and TV scripts with boldness because she's released the anxieties that plagued her in her 30s. She doesn't feel deflated by rejections anymore. Here's what both these women understood: your 40s are when you finally get permission to live as your actual self, not your ideal self. You've failed enough to know what really matters. You've survived enough to trust your instincts. So how do you begin? Start by getting crystal clear about what kind of life you actually want across every domain of your existence. Think about relationships, finances, health, spirituality, and work. Then here's the important part: start living that vision immediately. Not someday. Not when conditions are perfect. Now. Make a plan with your first action steps. Maybe that's research, taking a class, or having a conversation with someone already doing what interests you. You don't need to know every detail. You just need momentum. The reinvention you're considering might terrify you, and that terror is actually a good sign. It m This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
This is your Women Over 40 podcast. Welcome back to Women Over 40, the podcast where we celebrate the power of reinvention and second acts. I'm your host, and today we're talking about something that might feel scary but is absolutely transformative: pursuing new passions after 40. Let me tell you about Shinde, a woman who spent her twenties and thirties climbing the professional ladder as a costume design assistant in Mumbai. She had stability, independence, and everything society told her she should want. But somewhere in her thirties, a quiet restlessness began to emerge. She found herself questioning whether marriage was really the defining milestone she'd been led to believe it was. At 40, people around her started asking why she hadn't settled down yet. Instead of shrinking back, Shinde made a different choice. She decided her 40s would be about exploration and creativity on her own terms. Everything changed on a trip to Malaysia when she stumbled upon a horticulture exhibition. She saw bonsais arranged like poems in pots, terrariums holding miniature worlds, and something inside her bloomed. She returned home and approached her cousin about reviving their family nursery. Even when inspiration felt distant, she showed up with a notebook and pen, sitting among the plants until her curiosity returned. She started experimenting with small decorative houseplants in coconut shells. What began as a quiet project became Ashokvatika Nursery, and now she's presenting her business at networking collectives and learning about sensory gardens and artificial intelligence in plant care. Or consider Rochelle Potkar, an award-winning author and performance poet who felt a profound shift in her 40s. She describes entering what she calls the macro-journey, the longer winding road of life that demands perspective rather than urgency. Rochelle gave up thinking in short-term timeframes and became what she calls a journeywoman. In her 40s, she's pitching movie and TV scripts with boldness because she's released the anxieties that plagued her in her 30s. She doesn't feel deflated by rejections anymore. Here's what both these women understood: your 40s are when you finally get permission to live as your actual self, not your ideal self. You've failed enough to know what really matters. You've survived enough to trust your instincts. So how do you begin? Start by getting crystal clear about what kind of life you actually want across every domain of your existence. Think about relationships, finances, health, spirituality, and work. Then here's the important part: start living that vision immediately. Not someday. Not when conditions are perfect. Now. Make a plan with your first action steps. Maybe that's research, taking a class, or having a conversation with someone already doing what interests you. You don't need to know every detail. You just need momentum. The reinvention you're considering might terrify you, and that terror is actually a good sign. It m This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Blooming After 40: Nurturing Your Passions Like a Bonsai
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