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The Uplifters

The Uplifters Podcast features inspiring conversations with midlife women making big, brave moves in the second half of their lives. Each episode includes brain science and research on how to work with (not against) your midlife brain, body, and resources + tips and tools for designing your boldest second half of life! www.theuplifterspodcast.com

  1. 189

    What Happens After You Sell the $100 Million Company You Built?

    Sarah Kauss bootstrapped S'well with $30,000 of her own savings and built it into a $100 million company, one of the most recognizable consumer brands of the last decade. But this conversation isn't about how she built it. It's about what happened after she let it go, and what that taught her about identity, success, and legacy.In this episode, Sarah and Aransas talk about what it is like to step away from a company you spent years building. They get into the loneliness of being a founder who is learning and leading at the same time, why Sarah said yes to nearly everything for the first few years after her exit, and how she eventually built what she now calls her "portfolio life." This is a conversation for any woman in midlife who has wondered who she is when the thing she built no longer needs her, and the founders who want to build with a dream of selling their company someday.What You'll Learn:Building a company without a master plan — How Sarah grew S'well from one founder with $30,000 to a $100 million brand without ever mapping out an exit.Letting go of a founder identity in midlife — What it felt like when S'well removed her photo from the website, and why that hit harder than she expected.The hidden risk of overcorrecting after a big change — Why Sarah said yes to nearly every board seat offered to her, and what it took to start saying no.How to build a company someone wants to buy — Her advice for founders building toward an exit in their first five years.Defending your brand against copycats — What S'well learned when bigger, better-funded companies started copying the product.Building a portfolio career after 40 — How she moved from founder to investor, advisor, and board member.The midlife shift from founder to mentor role Key Timestamps: 0:00 — Introduction and sponsor read [~3:23] — Sarah's S'well origin story and the bootstrapped early years [~6:55] — Building a "portfolio life" instead of pouring into one thing [~11:01] — Learning to share the vision and bring in a team [~17:02] — Community Q&A: building a company someone wants to buy [~20:01] — Defending S'well against copycats and protecting IP [~23:02] — Sending S'well "off to college" and the mourning period after an exit [~28:47] — What scares Sarah now, and her advice for the next generation [~32:27] — Sarah nominates the next Uplifter Key Takeaways:For midlife founders building toward an exit: You don't need every part of the business polished. Show what's working and where there's room to grow, not that you've already maximized everything.For women over 40 redefining identity after a major career change: Not knowing what to say about yourself at a reunion or a party is normal, and it passes.For women building a second act: A portfolio of smaller, meaningful commitments can bring more fulfillment than pouring everything into one thing, even if it looks less impressive on paper.Featured Quote: "I finally realize at this age I actually know a lot of stuff." — Sarah KaussResources and Links:Sarah Kauss's website and office hours: sarahkauss.comEpisode sponsor, Join The Tryb: jointhetryb.com, code UPLIFTER20About Sarah Kauss: Sarah Kauss (50) is Managing Partner at Avignon Partners, where she is an investor and advisor to brands in retail, tech, and wellness. As the founder and former CEO of S’well, Sarah is a consumer products leader with a track record of launching companies, building multi-million dollar brands, and assembling high-performance senior leadership teams. She is a product design expert with deep experience developing and implementing successful exit strategies. Sarah held the position of CEO of S’well for ten years, bootstrapping the company with $30k of her savings to reach over $100M in annual revenue. During this time, Sarah created a new category and well-loved brand that helped displace more than four billion single-use plastic bottles and was named by Architectural Digest as one of the 25 designs that helped shape the world. Sarah sold S’well in 2022. Prior to S’well, Sarah was a real estate developer leading large international collaborations and partnerships, and a consultant working across a range of industries. Sarah started her career with EY as a Certified Public Accountant, working in both tax consulting and the auditing function. She provided professional services to public and privately held companies in the technology, healthcare, consumer products, and media sectors. Sarah has been recognized as a Fortune “40 Under 40” honoree and awarded the Harvard Business School Entrepreneurship Award. Under Sarah’s leadership, S’well was named the #1 Fastest-Growing, women-led company by the Women Presidents’ Organization, was honored with the Brand Design award by Inc. magazine, and placement on the Inc. 5000 List (top 100) of fastest-growing, privately-held companies. She is a member of the 2018 Class of Henry Crown Fellows and the 2020 Class of Braddock Scholars within the Aspen Global Leadership Network at the Aspen Institute. She earned a BS in accounting from the University of Colorado, Boulder, and an MBA from Harvard Business School. About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing big, brave work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife reinvention, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: women over 40, midlife reinvention, second act career women, life after selling your business, midlife identity shift, women founders over 40, career change after 40, redefining success in midlife, portfolio career women, midlife transition women, women entrepreneurs midlife, second half of life women, building confidence after 40, midlife career pivot, women over 40 success stories Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  2. 188

    Sexual Empowerment in Midlife

    Can getting in touch with your sexuality change everything else about your life? Sarah Nelson thought she had it all figured out. Good marriage, two kids, a high-powered nonprofit career. But underneath it, she'd spent decades editing herself into the good girl she was taught to be, especially when it came to sex. This conversation about women over 40 and midlife reinvention traces what happened when Sarah finally got honest with herself, and how that honesty led to separating from her husband, entering an open relationship, and becoming a sex and relationship coach.Featured Quote: "When you are honest with yourself, you actually make the other person happier." — Sarah NelsonResources and Links:Sarah's coaching website: sarahnelsoncoach.comSarah's Substack: sarahnelsoncoach.substack.comAbout Sarah Nelson: Sarah Nelson is a sex writer and relationship coach trained in the Somatica method of sex and relationship coaching, as well as positive intelligence. After two decades in a marriage built on a good girl narrative, she began a journey of sexual reintegration that led her to interview 50 women about reclaiming their sexuality in midlife. She now coaches women and men toward sexual wholeness, confidence, and self-honesty.About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, women over 40 setting boundaries, perimenopause confidence building, midlife self-acceptance, women's sexuality after 40 Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  3. 187

    Laura LeBleu Lit Her AARP Card on Fire

    What do you do when the midlife magazine you actually want to read doesn't exist? If you're Laura LeBleu, you burn your AARP card, drain your stock options, and build it yourself. In this episode, host Aransas Savas talks with the founding editor of Geezer Magazine about starting a print publication at 54, betting on yourself after a lifetime of betting on others, and what midlife reinvention really looks like from the inside. This is a conversation about creative confidence and how we stop waiting for someone else to give us a green light.If you've ever worried that it is too late to start something bold, this episode will dismantle that story completely.Laura's journey from advertising creative director to tech industry writer to founding editor is a masterclass in enlisting accumulated experience. At 54, she's not slowing down. She's just hitting her stride.What You'll Learn:How to bet on yourself in midlife — The fears Laura had to face to stop creating for others and start creating for herselfStarting a creative business after 40 — Why Laura believes the skills, resources, and chutzpah she needed could only have come together nowBuilding confidence after 40 — How a lifetime of "good but not great enough" self-talk finally got quietedHow to change careers after 40 — What happens when you stop waiting for permission and take the reinsMidlife reinvention in practice — The daily reality of learning something completely new while betting everything on yourselfWomen entrepreneurs over 40 — Why asking for help and admitting "I don't know what I'm doing" is the move, not the weaknessKey Timestamps:0:00 — Introduction and Join the Tryb sponsor read 1:22 — Aransas introduces the episode and midlife peak creativity research 2:57 — Introducing Laura LeBleu and Geezer Magazine 4:09 — Where Laura was before Geezer: burnout, a long marriage ending, writing for others 7:07 — The shower epiphany and the birth of Geezer 9:09 — Was Laura always a "screw it, let's go" person? 10:24 — Why she couldn't have done this at any other age 13:34 — The learning curve: everything she didn't know about making a magazine 16:00 — Asking for help as a strength, not a weakness 17:26 — Betting on yourself after a lifetime of betting on others 18:25 — The inner voice that said "good but not great enough" 20:39 — What happened when she finally put her innards on the line 22:13 — Don't wait for the green light 24:08 — Letting go and what Geezer is becoming 26:30 — How to support Laura and subscribe to Geezer Magazine 27:45 — Nominee: Angela Burt, author of "A Real Girl's Guide to Midlife"Key Takeaways:For midlife career changers: The skills, money, experience, and courage you need for your boldest move are not things you had at 30. They're things you've been building. Now is when they converge.For women over 40 seeking purpose: Waiting for someone to hand you permission is the surest way to never start. Take the reins.For perimenopause entrepreneurs: Admitting "I don't know what I'm doing" is not weakness. It's how you get the right people to help you build something that works.For second act builders: Regret lives in the things you didn't do. Failure at least means you tried.Resources and Links:Geezer Magazine: geezermagazine.com (use code UPLIFT15 for 15% off a subscription)Follow Laura on SubstackNominee Angela Burke: "A Real Girl's Guide to Midlife" Mountain Gazette (mentioned by Laura as a print magazine inspiration)About Laura LeBleu: Laura LeBleu is a writer, actor, Emmy Award-winning TV producer, cabaret performer, and founding editor of Geezer Magazine, a quarterly print publication she co-founded at 54. Geezer is described as the love child between The Atlantic and Mad Magazine, written by and for Gen X, and is utterly disinterested in telling you where to retire. The first print run of 5,000 copies was funded entirely by Laura's stock options.About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, starting business during menopause, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  4. 186

    How to Find Your Creative Soulmate

    What do you do with the words you never said? Sofia Kavlin built a home for them. In February 2024 she dragged a wooden mailbox into Washington Square Park, asked strangers to drop in a letter they would never send, and handed each person someone else's letter in return. More than 4,000 letters later, the Unsent Letter Mailbox has spread to Austin, Houston, and Chattanooga, and has been featured by The New York Times, NBC News, and The Kelly Clarkson Show.This conversation is about two things that change a creative life: finding the right collaborator, and alchemizing your toughest experiences. Sofia, a Bolivian-Canadian social impact designer, and Bonnie Blue Edwards, an award-winning producer, illustrator, and writer, talk about how they found each other, how they built trust, and how each of them turned private grief into public art.If you have ever longed for a creative partner, sat on an idea because you were scared to ask, or wondered whether your pain could become something useful, this one is for you.What You'll Learn:How to find a creative collaborator who gets it — why intuitive alignment cannot be manufactured, and how to recognize it when it shows upHow to ask for the support you need — Sofia's practice of naming exactly what she wanted before she had any idea who would answerHow trust actually gets built — the simple, unglamorous behaviors that made these two feel safe with each otherHow to turn grief into creative fuel — using art and community as a way through the hardest seasons instead of around themWhy art is not frivolous — the case that creative expression changes lives, saves lives, and makes livesHow to protect a vision while sharing it — holding collaborators with open hands without losing the heart of the workWhat "worth, not value" means — reframing exchange around human connection rather than a price tag"Turning our tragedy literally into lemonade, and by that I mean art." — Sofia KavlinResources and Links:Unsent Letter Mailbox: unsentlettermailbox.com | Instagram @unsentlettermailboxSofia Kavlin: Instagram @sofia.kavlinBonnie Blue Edwards: Instagram @bonnieblue952; her book of poems and illustrations, Stressed Out & Scatterbrained @stressedoutscatterbrainedLift and Be Lifted: A huge thank-you to Lia De Feo, who nominated both Sofia and Bonnie for this episode. And keep your eyes on the women they're lifting up next: Kelby Clark, founder of the creative salon Opus House and a brilliant poet and writer, and Catherine Burns, a wildly creative storyteller. We cannot wait to share their stories. About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing meaningful work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: unsent letters, anonymous letter project, creative collaboration, finding a creative partner, creative soulmate, art and healing, turning pain into art, expressive writing, public art project, women supporting women, courage capital, doing big brave things, creative entrepreneurship, art as connection, letter writing for healing, women creatives, second act, the Uplifters podcast Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  5. 185

    This Is Not As Scary As Cancer

    This week on The Uplifters Podcast, two extraordinary women in midlife share what a cancer diagnosis taught them about finally giving themselves permission to do the big, brave things they'd been putting off. If you've ever felt like you're driving through life with one foot on the gas and one foot on the brake, this episode is for you.You'll hear from Jacquelyn Fletcher Johnson, founder of the Heartwood Leadership Institute and award-winning author of fourteen books, who went through breast cancer treatment in 2020 and came out the other side asking, "What's mine to do?" And from Christy Kercheville, a CEO coach and master facilitator who was diagnosed with leiomyosarcoma, a rare and incurable cancer, in the first weeks of COVID, and has spent six years building her most purposeful, joy-filled chapter inside that diagnosis.Together they show us that midlife reinvention doesn't always begin with a plan. Sometimes it begins with something that strips everything else away and shows you, clearly and without apology, what actually matters.What You'll Learn:How to find purpose after a major life disruption — what both women asked themselves when everything changed, and how those questions led to completely new chaptersWhy midlife women keep one foot on the brake — the specific fears that show up differently at this stage of life, and how to work through themHow to build courage capital after 40 — the daily practices, rituals, and reframes both women use to keep moving when fear shows upHow to ask for exactly the kind of support you need — why generic help often misses and how to get specific so the people around you can actually show upWhy action over anxiety is a learnable skill — how Christy's goal-setting approach to hard emotions applies to any overwhelming transition, not just illnessWhat "precision manifesting" looks like in practice — how naming exactly what you want, out loud, changes what becomes possibleResources and Links:About Jacquelyn Fletcher Johnson: Jacquelyn Fletcher Johnson is the founder and CEO of the Heartwood Leadership Institute, one of JPMorgan Chase's 100 Women to Know in America, and the award-winning author of fourteen books. A global speaker and executive coach who has worked with everyone from Olympians to Fortune 100 CEOs, Jacquelyn creates platforms and experiences, including the Gateway Gathering and PitchFest. Connect with Jacquelyn: LinkedIn, Instagram About Christy Kercheville: Christy Kercheville is a CEO coach and master facilitator with over 25 years of experience working with Fortune 100 companies. Six years after being diagnosed with leiomyosarcoma, a rare and incurable cancer, she continues to coach leaders, raise funds for LMS research, and live with a ferocious and practical commitment to joy. Connect with Christy: TikTok, Instagram. To learn more about Leiomyosarcoma visit: Lmsdr.org and Imermanangels.orgAbout Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: midlife reinvention women, courage capital, women over 40 purpose, starting over at 40, midlife transformation, second act career women, building confidence after 40, midlife courage, women over 40 success stories, perimenopause fresh start, midlife awakening women, women changing careers 40s, midlife purpose women, second half of life, midlife dreams women, women entrepreneurs over 40, midlife transition women, life after 40 women Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  6. 184

    When Women Get Sick

    Did you know the average professional woman loses 20 to 25% of her annual income to menopause? Not from medical bills alone, but from invisible career costs and compounding retirement losses that most women never see coming. If you're a woman over 40 navigating perimenopause, midlife career decisions, or a second act reinvention, this conversation will change how you think about menopause, money, and your future. Dr. Kim Derezil is a double board-certified physician and certified wealth manager, and the only practitioner in the country combining medical expertise with financial planning specifically for women in menopause.In this episode, you'll learn how menopause affects your career decisions, retirement savings, and long-term financial health, and what to do about it right now, whether you're 25 or 65.Dr. Derezil began her career treating women through the menopause transition and watching them describe, visit after visit, how their symptoms were affecting their work and their money decisions. It wasn't until she went through the transition herself and turned down a contract that cost her $121,000 in retirement savings that she understood what her patients had been telling her for years. That moment became the catalyst for her life's mission: giving women the language, the data, and the strategy to fight back against what she calls the Menopause Tax.What You'll Learn:How perimenopause career change happens invisibly — the small, well-intentioned decisions that quietly cost you hundreds of thousands of dollarsThe three-part Menopause Tax framework — care costs, career costs, and compounding costs, and how to calculate your ownWhat midlife women over 40 can do right now — from tracking symptoms to building a financial reserve using your HSAWhy women changing careers in their 40s often blame themselves — and why the real culprit is hormones, not ambitionHow to build confidence after 40 as a female professional — using a coach, a doctor, and a financial advisor togetherStarting over during menopause with a plan — why having a plan is protection, and what a menopause financial audit actually looks likeWhat companies can do to stop losing their most experienced female talent — a clear business case for menopause workplace supportKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: The decisions that feel responsible in the moment (turning down opportunities, leaning out of leadership) can cost you six figures in retirement. See your doctor first, then build your plan.For women over 40 seeking purpose: You haven't lost your ambition. You may have lost your hormones. Getting support, medically and financially, is not a luxury; it is protection.For perimenopause entrepreneurs and 1099 workers: Your menopause tax is approximately 25% of income when you account for the self-employment gap, the benefit gap, and the career decisions you make while symptomatic.Featured Quote: "Your brain, your body, and your bank account just need a different approach, a fresh new perspective." — Dr. Kim DerezilResources & Links:Free Menopause Tax Risk Assessment: menoandmoney.comBook a Menopause Financial Audit: menoandmoney.comInstagram/Facebook: @menoandmoneyLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kderezilmdThe Menopause Society (practitioner directory): menopause.orgRelated Uplifters episodes:Julie Gordon White, CEO of MenoWell: SpotifyDenise Pines, founder of WisePause Wellness: SpotifyKarissa Pfeffer episode: SpotifyAbout Dr. Kim Derezil: Dr. Kim Derezil is a double board-certified physician and certified wealth manager, and the founder of Meno and Money. She is the only practitioner in the country combining menopause medicine with financial planning to help high-performing women over 40 recognize and reduce the hidden financial toll of perimenopause, before it becomes a six or seven-figure loss.About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, starting business during menopause, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, menopause tax, menopause financial planning, menopause career costs, menopause workplace, perimenopause retirement savings Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  7. 183

    The Menopause Tax

    Did you know the average professional woman loses 20 to 25% of her annual income to menopause? Not from medical bills alone, but from invisible career costs and compounding retirement losses that most women never see coming. If you're a woman over 40 navigating perimenopause, midlife career decisions, or a second act reinvention, this conversation will change how you think about menopause, money, and your future. Dr. Kim Derezil is a double board-certified physician and certified wealth manager, and the only practitioner in the country combining medical expertise with financial planning specifically for women in menopause.In this episode, you'll learn how menopause affects your career decisions, retirement savings, and long-term financial health, and what to do about it right now, whether you're 25 or 65.Dr. Derezil began her career treating women through the menopause transition and watching them describe, visit after visit, how their symptoms were affecting their work and their money decisions. It wasn't until she went through the transition herself and turned down a contract that cost her $121,000 in retirement savings that she understood what her patients had been telling her for years. That moment became the catalyst for her life's mission: giving women the language, the data, and the strategy to fight back against what she calls the Menopause Tax.What You'll Learn:How perimenopause career change happens invisibly — the small, well-intentioned decisions that quietly cost you hundreds of thousands of dollarsThe three-part Menopause Tax framework — care costs, career costs, and compounding costs, and how to calculate your ownWhat midlife women over 40 can do right now — from tracking symptoms to building a financial reserve using your HSAWhy women changing careers in their 40s often blame themselves — and why the real culprit is hormones, not ambitionHow to build confidence after 40 as a female professional — using a coach, a doctor, and a financial advisor togetherStarting over during menopause with a plan — why having a plan is protection, and what a menopause financial audit actually looks likeWhat companies can do to stop losing their most experienced female talent — a clear business case for menopause workplace supportKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: The decisions that feel responsible in the moment (turning down opportunities, leaning out of leadership) can cost you six figures in retirement. See your doctor first, then build your plan.For women over 40 seeking purpose: You haven't lost your ambition. You may have lost your hormones. Getting support, medically and financially, is not a luxury; it is protection.For perimenopause entrepreneurs and 1099 workers: Your menopause tax is approximately 25% of income when you account for the self-employment gap, the benefit gap, and the career decisions you make while symptomatic.Featured Quote: "Your brain, your body, and your bank account just need a different approach, a fresh new perspective." — Dr. Kim DerezilResources & Links:Free Menopause Tax Risk Assessment: menoandmoney.comBook a Menopause Financial Audit: menoandmoney.comInstagram/Facebook: @menoandmoneyLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kderezilmdThe Menopause Society (practitioner directory): menopause.orgRelated Uplifters episodes:Julie Gordon White, CEO of MenoWell: SpotifyDenise Pines, founder of WisePause Wellness: SpotifyKarissa Pfeffer episode: SpotifyAbout Dr. Kim Derezil: Dr. Kim Derezil is a double board-certified physician and certified wealth manager, and the founder of Meno and Money. She is the only practitioner in the country combining menopause medicine with financial planning to help high-performing women over 40 recognize and reduce the hidden financial toll of perimenopause, before it becomes a six or seven-figure loss.About Your Host: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, starting business during menopause, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, menopause tax, menopause financial planning, menopause career costs, menopause workplace, perimenopause retirement savings Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  8. 182

    Motherhood in Midlife

    For midlife women, Mother's Day can bring up all sorts of feelings. In this special episode, four midlife women share radically honest stories about motherhood, identity, and the inherited scripts we get to rewrite. Ruthie Ackerman, author of The Mother Code and founder of Ignite Writers Collective, reframes motherhood as a time of transformation rather than self-sacrifice and shows how midlife women can challenge the patriarchal myths that have shaped their choices. Katie Horwitch, founder of WANT (Women Against Negative Talk) and author of WANT Yourself, walks us through the inherited contracts behind our self-talk and how to replace our limiting stories. Sarah Gormley, author of The Order of Things, shares how starting over at 40, through therapy, loss, love, and an art gallery, gave her the life she'd always been chasing when she was climbing ladders. The episode closes with a sound bath from somatic healer and breast cancer survivor Shayla Martin, whose entire life was changed when she healed her Mother Wound. Whatever Mother's Day means to you, I hope you'll see yourself in these stories."I want to be a mother who believes that there are so many ways to have a worthy and beautiful life, both with and without children." — Ruthie AckermanResources & Links:The Mother Code by Ruthie Ackerman — available wherever books are soldIgnite Writers Collective — ignitewriterscollective.com WANT Yourself by Katie Horwitch — womenagainstnegativetalk.com The Order of Things by Sarah Gormley — available wherever books are soldShayla Martin — 3bellevolutionAbout the Featured Voices:Ruthie Ackerman is the founder of Ignite Writers Collective, a memoirist and journalist whose work has appeared in Vogue, The New York Times, and The Atlantic, and the author of The Mother Code — a book that reframes motherhood as a conscious, evolving practice rather than a fixed identity. Katie Horwitch is the founder of WANT (Women Against Negative Talk), a nationally recognized author, speaker, and self-talk activist. Her book WANT Yourself helps women shift their internal narrative by understanding the science of inherited belief.Sarah Gormley spent decades building an impressive career at IMAX, Martha Stewart, Adobe, and Forbes before starting over at 40 through therapy, loss, and reinvention. She now owns an art gallery in Columbus, Ohio and is the author of the memoir The Order of Things.Shayla Martin is a breast cancer survivor, somatic healing coach, and sound healer whose work began with healing her own mother wound. She is the founder of Feel It to Heal It™.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, midlife identity women, midlife self-talk, building confidence after 40, second act career women, women 40s new career, midlife awakening women, inspiring women over 40, midlife motivation women, perimenopause motivation, women over 40 success stories, midlife glow up, 40+ women entrepreneurs, growth mindset women over 40 Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  9. 181

    Women Are Better Than Men at Investing — So Why Aren’t We Doing It?

    What does it actually take for women over 40 to start investing, raise capital, and build the future they want to see? This panel discussion, recorded live at Uplifters Live in New York City, brings together three extraordinary women for one of the most honest conversations about money, midlife reinvention, and women's economic power you'll hear this year.For women navigating midlife transitions and second-act reinvention, the gender investing gap is not abstract. It is the difference between shaping the future or watching someone else do it.In this episode, you'll learn why the confidence gap keeps women from investing even when the data shows they outperform men, how to access private markets as a midlife woman with limited starting capital, and what it really takes to fundraise as a female founder. You'll also hear a powerful case for why women's sports may be the most undervalued investment opportunity of our generation.Katie Cella is a partner at Koru Capital and an angel investor with a mission to get more women funded and funding. Lorine Pendleton, named by Marie Claire as one of the 50 most connected women in America, pivoted from entertainment law to become one of the most influential investors in women's sports. Tracy Luckow left corporate CPG to co-found and patent Whipnotic, a product that disrupts a billion-dollar category, launching her company in 2020 with no prior fundraising experience.What You'll Learn:Women over 40 and investing confidence — why the gender gap persists even as women outperform men in returns, and what it takes to startHow to access private market investments — platforms and SPV structures that lower the minimum to $2,000 or lessRaising capital as a female founder in midlife — what Tracy learned launching a patented consumer brand with no finance backgroundWomen's sports as a midlife investment thesis — why Lorine says you want to get in before the asset is fully valuedFinancial, social, and human capital — three ways to invest in women founders even when you can't write a checkHow to evaluate startups and founders — what Katie Sella looks for when deciding where to put her moneyMidlife reinvention through entrepreneurship — Tracy's story of turning decades of CPG expertise into a disruptive second actKey Takeaways:For women over 40 considering investing: The confidence gap is real but the data is on your side. Studies show women outperform male investors by 0.4% to 1.8% annually. The biggest barrier isn't skill. It's starting.For midlife women building second-act businesses: Every investor conversation, whether or not it results in money, sharpens your pitch and your self-knowledge. No's are part of the process.For women interested in values-aligned investing: Platforms like PlayMoney.com and SPV structures through firms like Coru Capital make it possible to start investing in companies you believe in with as little as $2,000.For midlife female entrepreneurs and founders: Women's sports, AI, and mission-driven consumer brands are among the fastest-growing spaces. Getting in early matters.Featured Quote:"If we do not open up our checkbooks, our daughters and our granddaughters will be back in the kitchen." — Katie CellaConnect with Aransas: Instagram: @aransas_savas | Podcast: @the_uplifters_podcast | TikTok: @theuplifterspodcast | Facebook: Aransas Savas | Website: theuplifterspodcast.com | YouTube: @theuplifterspodcast | LinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, starting business during menopause, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, women investing, gender investing gap, women and money midlife, female investors, women's sports investing Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  10. 180

    Discovering You're Neurodivergent at 40

    What if the thing you've been adapting to your entire life had a name, and discovering it at 40 changed everything? Sadie Dingfelder is a veteran Washington Post science journalist who discovered at 39 that she had prosopagnosia (face blindness), affecting an estimated one in 50 people, many of whom have no idea. Sadie's journey into midlife self-knowledge is a masterclass in what it means to stop hiding your differences and start working with the brain you actually have. This is a second-act story rooted in science, told with humor, and bracingly honest about what it is like to finally see yourself clearly.In this episode, you'll learn why late diagnosis in women is so common (we are remarkably good at adapting and masking), about the midlife happiness curve, and what it looks like to build a life around your actual strengths rather than an exhausting performance of capacities you don't have. For any woman over 40 who has wondered whether her brain works differently, this conversation is a gift.Sadie Dingfelder is the author of Do I Know You?: A Faceblind Reporter's Journey into the Science of Sight, Memory and Imagination, a memoir-meets-reported-science book about prosopagnosia and what it reveals about human perception, memory, and identity. A former staff reporter at the Washington Post and senior science writer at the Monitor on Psychology, Sadie covered neuroscience and cognitive science for the American Psychological Association. Her book is now available in English, Italian, and Korean.What You'll Learn:Late diagnosis in midlife women — why women are so often diagnosed with neurological differences later than men, and what changes when you finally have a name for what you've been livingHow to work with the brain you have, not the one you expected — Sadie's path from masking and adapting to building systems that actually workThe midlife happiness curve — the psychological finding that most people are most unhappy around age 45, and why things get betterBuilding confidence after 40 as a woman — how Sadie's face blindness, rather than limiting her, forged an extraordinary capacity for connectionMidlife reinvention and self-knowledge — why understanding your neurodivergence in the second half of life can be relief rather than burdenWomen over 40 and second-act identity — what it means to rewrite your story in midlife when you finally understand the plotPerimenopause and brain differences — the broader context of why midlife women are rethinking how their brains work and what they needKey Takeaways:For midlife women navigating self-discovery: Late diagnosis is not failure. Women are exceptional adapters and maskers, which is why neurological differences often go unrecognized until midlife or later. Understanding your brain is an act of courage, not a crisis.For women over 40 seeking purpose in reinvention: The midlife happiness curve is real and replicated. The bottom of the U (around 45) is not permanent. Purposeful living, not productivity-driven living, is what drives the upturn.For perimenopause and midlife identity shifts: Midlife is when many women stop performing the version of themselves they constructed for survival and start building the version that actually fits. Sadie's journey is a template for that.Featured Quote: "Labels are tools. If they help, use them. When they don't, drop them." — Sadie DingfelderResources and Links:Do I Know You? by Sadie Dingfelder (available on Amazon and wherever books are sold)Sadie's website: SadieD.comSadie on Instagram: @sadiefdSadie on TikTok: @sadiedingfelderRelated Uplifters episode: Gisela Sanders-Alcántara on disability, neurodivergence, and storytellingAbout Sadie Dingfelder: Sadie Dingfelder is a freelance science journalist, author, and former Washington Post staff reporter who covers neuroscience, cognitive science, and human behavior. Her book Do I Know You? blends reported science with personal memoir to explore face blindness, perception, and what it means to understand your own brain in midlife. She is a sought-after voice on neurodiversity, late diagnosis in women, and the science of how we see each other.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women over 40 neurodivergence, face blindness prosopagnosia, late diagnosis women, midlife self-knowledge, second act women, midlife brain differences, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife awakening women, perimenopause brain fog, neurodiversity midlife women Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  11. 179

    What a Near-Cult Experience Taught One Woman About Identity, Leadership, and Midlife Freedom

    What happens when a midlife woman decides to stop segmenting her identity and start owning her whole story? In this episode of The Uplifters Podcast, leadership consultant and memoirist Blair Glaser joins host Aransas Savas to explore one of the most common midlife reinvention challenges: the courage to be fully known. Blair's memoir, This Incredible Longing, follows her years inside Siddha Yoga, a near-cult spiritual organization, and what she discovered about herself, her gifts, and her capacity for change. For women over 40 navigating second act career changes, identity shifts, and the particular vulnerability of perimenopause and midlife transition, Blair's story is both a permission slip and a road map.In this conversation, Blair and Aransas dig into the "lily pad" career path, the financial reality and soulful satisfaction of following your own signal through multiple vocations across decades. They also explore why midlife women are uniquely primed to look back as a way of moving forward, and what it actually takes to silence the inner bully that shows up at 3 a.m. before every brave act. If you've been circling a story you haven't told, a pivot you haven't made, or a version of yourself you haven't fully claimed, this one's for you.Blair brings over two decades of experience as a therapist, leadership consultant, and writer to a conversation that is sharp, funny, and deeply honest about the costs and rewards of starting over at 50.What You'll Learn:How to navigate a midlife career pivot when you have multiple identities — Blair's "professional vocationalist" framework for women over 40 who don't fit neatly into one laneWhy midlife women look back to move forward — what memory researchers say about the pull toward early chapters during the second half of lifeHow menopause shaped one woman's second act career change — the hormonal and psychological shift that moved Blair from therapy to consultingBuilding confidence after 40 when your story feels complicated — how to hold contradictory truths about your own past without flattening themA practical technique for silencing the inner critic in midlife — Blair's embodied, no-nonsense approach to sovereignty over fearHow to own your story as a second act career woman — the courage it takes to publish, share, and stand fully in your own historyResources & Links:Blair's website: blairglaser.comBlair's Substack, The HI Stack: thehistack.substack.comInstagram: @blairglaserLinkedIn: Blair GlaserThis Incredible Longing — available wherever you buy booksAbout Blair Glaser:Blair Glaser, MA, is a memoirist, speaker, and leadership consultant with a background as a licensed psychotherapist. A midlife reinvention story in her own right, she has navigated careers in acting, therapy, nonprofit leadership (including six years with V-Day, Eve Ensler's organization to end violence against women), and organizational consulting. Her debut memoir, This Incredible Longing, traces her years inside the spiritual organization Siddha Yoga and what she learned about identity, belonging, and the courage to claim your whole story. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and dog-ter, Vanna White.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, starting business during menopause, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, midlife memoir women, storytelling courage midlife, spiritual awakening midlife women, identity shifts perimenopause, women writers over 40 Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  12. 178

    How to Stop Avoiding Your Life

    If you're a woman over 40 who has ever found yourself stuck in a loop — knowing what you need to do but unable to make yourself do it — this episode is for you. Somatic teacher and spiritual leadership coach Ally Bogard joins The Uplifters to talk about why we avoid, procrastinate, and what it actually takes to build the courage to live more fully in midlife. Whether you're navigating a midlife transition, a second act career change, or simply trying to close the gap between who you are and who you want to be, this conversation is for you.In this episode, you'll learn how to distinguish between real stress and imaginary stress, how to use tiny completable actions to close the loops that drain your energy, and why building "the riverbank" — your nervous system capacity, your community, your values — matters more than any five-year plan right now.Ally Bogard has spent more than twenty years teaching individuals and groups how to integrate the mind, emotions, and body in service of a more courageous, authentic life. This conversation, recorded at the start of the year and released in spring when real change tends to take root, is a gift for any woman over 40 who is ready to stop postponing her own life.What You'll Learn:How to stop avoiding hard conversations in midlife — Ally's framework for distinguishing what you're genuinely not ready for versus what you're using readiness as an excuse to avoidWomen over 40 and the loop-closing method — why small, completable actions build more courage capital than big dramatic pivotsMidlife reinvention and the nervous system — how somatic regulation supports second act career changes and identity shiftsStarting over at 40 with too many open tabs — the real cost of aspirational queuing and how to get honest about your capacityPerimenopause, identity, and the KPI shift — why what used to define success stops working in the second half of life, and what to replace it withWomen changing careers in their 40s — why building the container (values, community, nervous system capacity) matters more than the planMidlife transformation through self-compassion — how to stop reframing your way out of discomfort and start getting genuinely curious about itKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: The things you've been postponing aren't going anywhere — they're quietly draining the energy you need to build something new. One tiny, completable action changes that.For women over 40 seeking authenticity: Insight without action is a kind of betrayal. What do you know right now that you can do today?For women navigating midlife transition: You don't need a five-year plan. You need a riverbank — the nervous system capacity, values, and community that let everything else flow.Featured Quote: "Insight without action sucks. What do I know that I can do? What do I know that I can do?" — Ally BogardResources & Links:allybogard.com/eventsInstagram: @allybogardByron Katie's "The Work": thework.comRelated Uplifters episodes: [please add 2-3 relevant deep links]About Ally Bogard: Ally Bogard is a somatic teacher and spiritual leadership coach with over twenty years of experience helping individuals and groups integrate mind, emotion, and body. A women over 40 doing second-act work in the deepest sense, her practice blends rigorous methodology with an intuitive, human-centered approach to nervous system regulation, inquiry, and midlife reinvention.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing meaningful work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords: perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, somatic healing midlife, midlife identity shift, nervous system regulation women, midlife avoidance, authentic living over 40 Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  13. 177

    The Knot Principle

    Three years ago, I launched this podcast because I believed that women in midlife were doing some of the most important, most underrated work in the world, and that if we could just hear each other’s stories, we would all be braver. Three years and 155 episodes later, I believe that more than ever.So I wanted to close out this Women Making History series with someone who embodies everything The Uplifters stands for. Someone who didn’t set out to change 40,000 lives. Someone who just saw a young woman sleeping in a park and got brave enough to walk over and say hello.Her name is Deborah Koenigsberger. She’s 65, she’s been running Hearts of Gold in New York City for over 30 years, and she is one of the most energized and energizing people I have ever talked to in my life.Deborah started her career as a fashion model and stylist. In 1989, she started her own boutique, Noir et Blanc, a French-themed women’s clothing shop in Manhattan.Then three things happened almost at the same time, like the universe was making a point.One: She was attending a Stevie Wonder concert, seven nights in a row, third row dead center (of course). His song “Take the Time Out” kept rattling around in her head. What did it mean for her?Two: Walking her usual route between home and the boutique, she started noticing a young woman sleeping in Madison Square Park. Deborah finally got up the nerve to approach her. The woman was 19. She’d been molested at home, gone to a shelter, been molested there too, and decided the street was safer than any of her options. Deborah, who had grown up surrounded by community, aunts, cousins, always a couch, always a chair, always somewhere safe to land, couldn’t process it. Nineteen years on this earth and not one person had cared enough to protect her.Third: a makeup artist she’d met on vacation reached out. It was Bobbi Brown, who was just starting to build her name, and she’d been volunteering at a women’s shelter, making the moms feel beautiful. She invited Deborah to do a seminar with her about what to wear when going out. That shelter, it turned out, was between Deborah’s home and her boutique. She had walked past it every single day without knowing it existed. A few months later, she asked the executive director: What do you do for Christmas? They went to the 99-cent store and filled a big bag, and each child got to pick one toy.Deborah thought: That is not Christmas. So she used that season’s proceeds from Noir et Blanc to sponsor a big Christmas party for all 135 kids and their moms. But it was at that party that she got her real education. A little girl ran to show her mother what she’d gotten, and her mother said flatly, “So what. Ain’t nobody ever done nothing for me”. It gutted Deborah at first. Then she sat with it. The mother wasn’t ungrateful. She just didn’t know what this was. She’d never had it. And if she had never felt cared for, she couldn’t do it for her kids. So the work got bigger. Not just Christmas, but Easter, every holiday, every moment that says: you belong, you are seen, someone thought of you. And eventually Deborah understood: it was the mothers who needed support most of all. If mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy. A magnet from her own mother’s fridge became the philosophy of Hearts of Gold.Studies consistently show that women over 40 experience a significant shift in motivation, moving away from external validation and toward meaning-making. The challenge isn’t finding the energy for purpose. It’s giving ourselves permission to act before we have the whole plan.Her Courage Practice: The Knot Principle Imagine a piece of rope tied into a hundred knots, Deborah says. They look impossible. You don’t even want to start. But once you work that first knot loose and thread the loop through, you can get to the next one. And suddenly you realize you can do the whole thing.She calls this taking baby steps, but I think it’s something more specific than that. It’s not about shrinking the goal. It’s about refusing to look at the whole rope at once. Today’s problem is this. Let me see if I can help them with this. And then the next thing. And then the next.For 30 years, Deborah has untied the rope one knot at a time for thousands of families. The audacity of that, when you look at the full picture, is staggering. But she never looked at the full picture. She just worked the knot in front of her. That’s it. That’s the whole practice.What would you be able to do if you stopped looking at the whole rope?5 Ways Deborah Shows Us How to Build Our Courage Capital:Engages instead of averts. Deborah walked toward a young woman sleeping in a park when every instinct says to look away. That single act of engagement started a 30-year movement. The next time you feel the pull to scroll past something hard, consider: what happens if you look up?Acts on what she has, not what she lacks. She didn’t have a nonprofit infrastructure. She had a fashion boutique, a Christmas spirit, and a credit card. She sponsored Christmas for 135 families with what was already in her hands. What’s already in yours?Teaches by living, not preaching. Her sons grew up watching their mother do this work, not hearing lectures about it. Her younger son was five years old when he found money on the street and immediately asked if he could give it to the kids in the shelter. Courage is caught, not taught.Redirects worry into energy. Worrying is energy too, but it’s energy that stays inside and reaches nobody. When she feels overwhelmed by the scale of homelessness, she doesn’t sit with the feeling. She asks: what can I do today? Then she does it.Asks for what she needs and makes it easy for others to give. Her Road to a Million campaign is a masterclass in accessible generosity. Get ten friends to donate five dollars. Drops of water fill a bucket. Lift Her UpVisit heartsofgold.org to make a donation to Hearts of Gold’s Road to a Million campaign (even $5 makes a real difference), sign up to volunteer your time or professional skills, or donate clothing to the TTH Vintage thrift store at 40 West 25th Street in Manhattan. Follow along on Instagram at @heartsofgoldnyc.And if you’re local to New York, I’m planning a little shopping party at the store. Come thrift with me and support something real. Details coming soon on Substack.If you loved this story...This is the final episode in our Women Making History Through Small Acts series, and it joins a constellation of conversations about women who saw a gap and decided to fill it. Start with Terry Grahl’s episode, founder of Enchanted Makeovers, who transformed shelter spaces for women and children escaping domestic violence, then visit Kerry Brodie’s episode, founder of Emma’s Torch, which trains refugees and survivors of human trafficking in the culinary arts. Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  14. 176

    A Global Peace Leader on Turning Fear Into Action When Democracy Feels Fragile

    This week on The Uplifters Podcast, global peace leader and midlife changemaker Kerri Kennedy shares how women in the second half of life are uniquely primed for civic action. Kennedy brings 20+ years of experience in human rights, peacebuilding, and political violence response to a conversation that every woman navigating midlife reinvention, community leadership, and the question of "what can I actually do?" needs to hear.In this episode, you'll hear how Kennedy mobilized a community to secure the release of a neighbor detained by ICE, how small community actions add up to a bigger impact, and how she's sustained decades of difficult work without burning out. Her framework for turning fear into action is practical, research-backed, and exactly what women over 40 need right now.From training women parliamentarians in Afghanistan under death threats to founding PACs to get more women elected in New Jersey, Kennedy's story is a masterclass in how midlife women can use their networks, experience, and identity certainty to lead when it matters most.What You'll Learn:How women over 40 lead differently in civic spaces — Kennedy's specific account of how midlife identity certainty, networks, and experience translate to faster, more decisive actionThe 3.5% rule for nonviolent change — what decades of civil resistance research says about how few people it actually takes to shift a systemHow to turn civic paralysis into a menu of options — concrete, risk-calibrated actions from spending your values to showing up in personSustaining long-haul work without burnout — the "Porous Choir" framework for rest, resilience, and collective actionHow to talk to your kids about a scary future — Kennedy's approach to raising engaged, grounded citizens in uncertain timesBuilding your fear threshold incrementally — why courage is a practice, not a trait, and how to expand it safelyKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction and Join the Tryb sponsor 1:30 - Welcome and Women's History Month series context 2:30 - Introducing Kerri Kennedy: global peace leader and peacebuilder 5:00 - How a community mobilized to free a detained neighbor 7:00 - How midlife women lead differently: identity certainty and networks 9:00 - Afghanistan, 9/11, and the moments that narrowed Kerri's north star 13:00 - The 3.5% rule: what the science says about nonviolent civil resistance 19:00 - A practical menu of civic actions for every risk tolerance 22:00 - Mirror neurons, ingroup expansion, and bridging political divides 27:30 - Talking to people who are exhausted from the fight 29:00 - The Porous Choir: how to sustain long-haul civic work 31:30 - Medium-term goal setting for movement work (and for weightlifting) 36:00 - What to tell your kids when they're afraid of the future 43:00 - Processing fear and building a fear threshold 48:00 - Translating fear into action: a practical exercise 49:30 - Guest nomination: Marcia, human rights lawyer in Costa RicaKey Takeaways:For midlife women navigating civic engagement: Identity certainty, which research shows peaks around age 65, means women in the second half of life are neurologically primed to act from values rather than fear, making midlife one of the most powerful times for civic leadership.For women over 40 seeking purpose: The "Porous Choir" framework offers a sustainable model for long-term impact: contribute when you can, rest when you must, trust the collective to hold what you can't.For anyone feeling paralyzed by the scale of current events: Kennedy's research-backed 3.5% rule reframes the problem. You don't need everyone. You need a sustained, nonviolent 3.5%, and your small action is part of that percentage.Resources & Links:American Friends Service Committee: afsc.orgKerri Kennedy on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kerrikenKerri Kennedy on Instagram: @kerrikennedy1Book: Indivisible: Global Leaders on Shared Security (co-edited by Kerri Kennedy)Related episode, Amy Cohen (Families for Safe Streets): Listen on SpotifyRelated episode, Rev. Ann Kansfield (FDNY Chaplain): Listen on SpotifyRelated episode, Laura Kavanagh (First Female NYC Fire Commissioner): Listen on SpotifyJoin the Tribe: jointhetryb.com, code: UPLIFTER20About Kerri Kennedy:Kerri Kennedy is a global peace leader with more than two decades of experience advancing human rights, protecting civic space, and responding to political violence worldwide. She serves as International Associate General Secretary at the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), overseeing peacebuilding, humanitarian response, and migration programs across four regions and more than 20 country offices. She is the co-editor of Indivisible: Global Leaders on Shared Security and the founder of two PACs supporting women in New Jersey politics. A midlife changemaker in every sense, Kennedy brings hard-won global experience home to local community action.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reintegration. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, midlife civic engagement, women over 40 leadership, midlife women activism, democratic resilience women, women community changemakers, inspiring women over 40, midlife awakening women, women over 40 success stories, growth mindset women over 40YouTube Show Notes:#154: How to Turn Fear Into Action When Democracy Feels FragileWhat does a global peace leader do when democracy feels fragile? She mobilizes. And she showed me exactly how to do it.This week on The Uplifters Podcast, I'm joined by Kerri Kennedy, International Associate General Secretary at the American Friends Service Committee, where she oversees peacebuilding, humanitarian response, and migration programs across 4 regions and 20+ country offices. Kerri has appeared on CNN, Al Jazeera English, and NPR, and is the co-editor of Indivisible: Global Leaders on Shared Security.This is a Women's History Month episode, and it might be the most practical civic conversation we've ever had. Kerri shares the research-backed "3.5% rule" for nonviolent change, her "Porous Choir" framework for sustaining long-haul work without burnout, and a concrete menu of actions for women at every risk tolerance who want to show up for their communities right now.If you've been feeling frozen, exhausted, or unsure where to start, this episode will meet you exactly where you are.In this episode:Why women over 40 are uniquely primed for civic leadershipThe 3.5% rule: how few people it takes to shift an entire systemHow to act civically without putting yourself at riskThe Porous Choir: how to sustain decades of meaningful workWhat to tell your kids when they're afraid of the futureBuilding your fear threshold, one small brave step at a timeConnect with Kerri Kennedy: AFSC: https://www.afsc.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kerriken/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kerrikennedy1/Connect with Aransas: Website: https://www.theuplifterspodcast.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aransas_savas/ Substack: theuplifterspodcast.substack.comShop Join the Tryb: https://jointhetryb.com | Code: UPLIFTER20 Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  15. 175

    Midlife Women Shaping Local Politics

    What does it look like when midlife women step up to lead in a world that has historically told them to sit down? In this episode of The Uplifters Podcast, host Aransas Savas sits down with her own neighbors, two women who ran against each other for mayor of Highlands, New Jersey, to talk about local leadership, community engagement, and the very specific courage it takes to run for office as a woman over 40. Women currently make up just 28% of Congress, hold only 12 of 50 governorships, and are twice as likely as men to rate themselves unqualified to run for office even with identical credentials. This is a conversation about why that has to change, and how midlife women are uniquely positioned to lead it.You'll hear Rebecca Wells, the first woman to serve as fire chief of the Highlands Fire Department, and Carolyn Broullon, a three-term mayor, talk candidly about what it took to campaign in a small town, how they see the future of their community, and what civic engagement really looks like at the local level. Whether you've thought about running for office, joining a committee, or just finally going to a town council meeting, this episode is for you. For midlife women navigating second act reinvention or looking for ways to create real-world impact, this is your reminder that the most powerful change often starts in your own backyard.What You'll Learn:How midlife women in politics overcome the confidence gap — and why women are twice as likely to underestimate their own qualificationsStarting over and showing up after loss — Rebecca ran for mayor months after losing her father and what that taught her about grief and purposeWomen over 40 in civic leadership — what barriers still exist and how these two women navigated themBuilding community trust as a midlife woman — the Edelman research on proximity and why face-to-face engagement matters more than everHow to get involved in local politics without running for office — practical entry points for midlife women who want to make a differenceNonpartisan elections and women's leadership — what happens when you remove party labels and ask people to actually thinkMidlife reinvention through community service — how showing up locally can become a second act of purpose and impactKey Timestamps: 0:00 - Introduction and Join the Trybsponsor spot 1:30 - Welcome and state of women in politics stats 3:00 - Introducing Rebecca Wells and Carolyn Broullon 4:30 - What Highlands means to Rebecca (lifelong resident) 5:45 - What Highlands means to Carolyn (chosen community) 7:00 - Their shared vision for the future of the town 10:00 - The experience of running for office as a midlife woman 11:30 - Rebecca on running while grieving her father 13:30 - Carolyn on building community trust through presence 15:00 - Bringing kids into the campaign 17:30 - The election results and what a 66-vote margin means 19:30 - A thousand people who didn't vote — civic disengagement 21:00 - Helen Arteaga and the power of local impact 22:30 - How disengagement connects to feeling powerless 25:00 - Rebecca's plan for a non-political neighborhood group 27:00 - Nonpartisan elections, tribalism, and voter behavior 30:00 - Closing: how to show up in your own communityKey Takeaways:For midlife women considering civic leadership: You don't have to have all the answers. You just have to ask the questions and be willing to enlist others to help find solutions.For women over 40 seeking purpose and impact: Real change starts locally. The most powerful thing you can do in a broken-feeling world is take care of your own backyard.For midlife women navigating loss or transition: Rebecca ran for mayor months after losing her father. Grief can be a north star, not just a stopping point.Featured Quote:"If you can give a night a week, you get to learn your neighbors, have input, and really shape your community." — Rebecca WellsResources & Links:Related episode: Helen Arteaga — First Latina CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals/ElmhurstEdelman Trust Barometer: https://www.edelman.com/trust/trust-barometerJoin the Tribe: jointhetryb.com code: UPLIFTER20About Rebecca Wells:Rebecca Wells is a lifelong resident of Highlands, New Jersey and the first woman ever to serve as fire chief of the Highlands Fire Department. A second-act civic leader and midlife woman in politics, she has served five terms on town council, nearly two decades on the local housing authority, and currently serves as Deputy Chief and on the Board of Education.About Carolyn Broullon:Carolyn Broullon is the three-term mayor of Highlands, New Jersey, a women-in-leadership pioneer who moved to the town in 2002 and has spent over two decades building community trust through presence, dialogue, and civic innovation, including leading the effort to bring nonpartisan elections to Highlands.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:women in local politics, midlife women leadership, women over 40 civic engagement, midlife reinvention second act, women running for office, women in male dominated fields, midlife women making a difference, courage capital, perimenopause confidence, second act women over 40, midlife purpose women, women 40s new purpose, inspiring women over 40, midlife motivation women, starting over at 40 women, women changing careers midlife, local leadership women, community engagement midlife women, women over 40 success stories, midlife awakening women Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  16. 174

    How To Build Community

    In this episode, we meet Dutch documentary filmmaker Corinne van der Borch and Australian artist-animator Edwina White — two women in the second half of life who turned a dog park friendship into a creative partnership, and a Brooklyn crossing guard into the subject of their upcoming documentary, I Got You. For any woman navigating midlife reinvention, this conversation is a masterclass in starting hyperlocal, accepting help gracefully, and doing meaningful work even when the ground is shifting beneath you.You'll hear how these two collaborators built a community-funded project from the ground up — no big studio, no safety net — while each navigating their own personal upheaval. This is a midlife career pivot story, a creative courage story, and above all, a story about what happens when we pay close attention to the people right in front of us.Miss T, the Bed-Stuy crossing guard at the center of the documentary, is herself a remarkable woman: a foster care survivor who has built a neighborhood family out of loose ties, birthday cards, and epic twice-yearly dinner parties. Her philosophy — generous with love, selective with energy — is something every woman over 40 can carry with them.What You'll Learn:How to start a meaningful creative project in midlife with limited resources — Corinne and Edwina's model of community-funded, in-kind collaborationWhy hyperlocal impact matters for women over 40 seeking purpose — and how Miss T's corner became the center of a whole neighborhood's resilienceHow to convert loose social ties into real community — the skill that defines Miss T's life and that any woman in midlife can practiceBuilding creative partnerships in the second half of life — what made this dog-park friendship into a genuine collaborationAsking for help and receiving it — especially for women over 40 who have been conditioned to go it aloneThe courage to share work publicly before it's finished — and how visibility creates the support you didn't know was comingKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction & Join the Tryb sponsor message 1:30 - Welcome to The Uplifters & introduction of Corinne and Edwina 2:45 - Who is Miss T? The Bed-Stuy crossing guard who changes everything 6:30 - How Miss T hosts community dinner parties and builds neighborhood family 9:00 - Loose ties vs. strong ties — and what Miss T teaches us about connection 10:30 - Miss T's philosophy: open-hearted but selective with energy 14:00 - What it means to show up with presence vs. resources 15:00 - Edwina's personal journey: navigating divorce and upheaval during filming 17:00 - How the corner became a refuge — and how the collaboration began 19:30 - The dog park meeting and Sesame Street connection 22:00 - The multimedia vision: animation, drone footage, and mixed-media storytelling 26:00 - The snowball effect: how community support found I Got You 31:00 - Three lessons for doing big, brave things: start local, share openly, accept help 34:00 - How to support the documentary — GoFundMe and skills-based contributions 37:00 - Nominating the next Uplifter: a filmmaker working on a bell hooks documentaryKey Takeaways:For midlife women starting creative projects: You don't need a big platform or big budget — you need one honest story and the willingness to tell it in publicFor women over 40 seeking community: Miss T shows us that connection is a daily practice, not a grand gesture; it's the birthday card, the emoji, the remembered nameFor midlife career changers and collaborators: The right creative partner might be walking their dog twenty feet away — and the project that heals you might also be the one that matters most to your communityFeatured Quote:"It's really easy to fall into the trap of thinking, I don't have enough — and this is a woman who shows us that you just need yourself and the moment you're in to be present and connect in order to have tremendous impact for generations." — Aransas SavasResources & Links:Support the documentary: GoFundMe — I Got YouCorinne's film Sisters on Track — available on NetflixRelated episodes: Gina Hamadey on gratitude and connection | Alison Mariella Désir on building community | Cleyvis Natera on creative courageAbout the Guests:Dutch documentary filmmaker Corinne van der Borch (Sisters on Track, Netflix) and Australian artist-animator Edwina White are midlife creative collaborators whose work spans documentary film, animation, Sesame Street, and now I Got You — a short documentary about Miss T, the Brooklyn crossing guard who became the heartbeat of her Bed-Stuy neighborhood. Both women are in the second half of their careers, making work that centers community, connection, and the quiet heroism of everyday people.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:midlife reinvention women, women over 40 creative careers, second act career women, midlife community building, women over 40 starting over, midlife purpose women, women 40s new career, midlife transition women, second half of life women, inspiring women over 40, midlife collaboration, women entrepreneurs over 40, midlife awakening women, midlife courage capital, midlife dreams women, 40+ women creative projects, women over 40 success stories, midlife glow up, community connection midlife, women changing careers 40s Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  17. 173

    Finding Love After 40 — And the Fourth Date Rule

    Alyssa Dineen: Midlife Dating Coach — Finding Love Online After 40 What does it actually take to find love in midlife — especially when you're starting over after a long marriage, navigating menopause, and swiping on apps you never imagined you'd need? For women over 40 returning to dating, the modern landscape can feel like a foreign country. Dating coach and author Alyssa Dineen found herself there too, leaving an 18-year marriage in her early forties and figuring out online dating in real time. Now she helps midlife women navigate the apps with confidence, strategy, and a lot less heartbreak.In this episode, you'll learn what actually works — from building an authentic profile that attracts the right match to her signature "four-date minimum" rule that has helped countless women find love they nearly walked away from. Alyssa brings both personal experience and professional wisdom to what it means to date with intention during this second act.Alyssa's own midlife reinvention took her from a difficult marriage to a coaching practice she built from scratch, helping online daters feel more empowered as they navigate connection in the second half of life. Her transformation is proof that it's never too late — including the 84-year-old client who met the love of her life and got married.What You'll Learn:How to find love online after 40 — Alyssa's proven strategy for online dating success in midlife, including which apps actually work for women over 40Why the "four-date minimum" changes everything — what science and experience both tell us about chemistry, attraction, and why we give up too soonMidlife reinvention through dating — how getting back out there after divorce can become a profound act of self-discovery for women over 40Building confidence after 40 as a female founder — how Alyssa turned her own second-act experience into a thriving coaching businessHow to create an authentic dating profile — why repelling the wrong matches is a strategy, not a failure, for women seeking meaningful connectionStarting over during midlife transition — what to do when modern dating technology feels completely overwhelmingPerimenopause and romantic connection — understanding how our nervous systems can mistake anxiety for attraction, and how to rewire toward healthier loveKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction & Join the Tribe sponsor 1:30 - Welcome to the Love Series finale 2:00 - Statistics on dating after 50 3:00 - Introducing Alyssa Dineen 4:30 - Alyssa's 18-year marriage and the decision to leave 6:45 - Rediscovering herself through dating in her early forties 8:15 - Meeting her partner on Tinder and how Style My Profile was born 11:00 - The parallel between career reinvention and dating reinvention 12:45 - Authenticity in dating profiles and why we hide ourselves 16:30 - The four-date minimum explained 17:00 - Looking back at Alyssa's own four dates with her partner 21:00 - When to keep going vs. call it done 23:00 - The science of neural pathways and old relationship patterns 26:00 - Why we chase the wrong kind of "exciting" 30:15 - Navigating dating app technology in midlife 33:00 - Why you need a strategy (not just an app) to find love 36:00 - The most important thing midlife women should know about finding love 38:00 - Curiosity as the single most powerful dating tool 39:15 - Alyssa's new podcast: The Dating Lab 40:00 - Self-care and the radical practice of napping 42:00 - How to find and support AlyssaKey Takeaways:For midlife women returning to dating: The "four-date minimum" isn't about settling — it's about giving real connection time to develop past the walls we've built from years of lived experienceFor women over 40 seeking purpose and love: Your dating journey can become a second-act reinvention story; the same curiosity and openness that helps you find love helps you find yourselfFor perimenopause entrepreneurs and career changers: Alyssa's path from difficult marriage to thriving business owner is a masterclass in turning personal pain into professional purposeFor anyone who thinks it's too late: A client found love and got married at 84. The data on midlife online dating is actually quite good — 72% of singles aged 43-58 report their online dating efforts led to a real romantic relationshipFeatured Quote:"It is not too late. I hear this from women who are 40, 45, 50, 60 — everybody thinks they've waited too long. It is not too late." — Alyssa DineenResources & Links:Alyssa's website: stylemyprofilenyc.comInstagram: @stylemyprofilenycPersonal Instagram: @alyssadineenTikTok: @stylemyprofileAlyssa's podcast: The Dating Lab (available on all major platforms)Join the Tribe: jointhetribe.com — use code UPLIFTER20 for 20% off your first orderAbout Alyssa Dineen:Alyssa Dineen is a published author, dating coach, and founder of Style My Profile NYC — a transformative coaching practice helping online daters feel more confident and empowered as they navigate modern dating. After leaving an 18-year marriage in her early forties, Alyssa rebuilt her life and found love through the same process she now teaches. A true midlife reinvention story, Alyssa's work helps women over 40 approach dating with strategy, authenticity, and hope.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, female founders midlife, perimenopause motivation, finding love after 40, online dating over 40, dating in midlife, midlife dating women, second act love story, women 40s dating apps, dating after divorce over 40, midlife dating coach, love after 50, building confidence after 40, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, dating app strategy women over 40, finding partner in second half of life Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  18. 172

    Staying Human in the Age of AI

    Susan Ruth: Filmmaker and Podcaster on Human Connection — Staying Fully Human at Midlife and BeyondWhat does it mean to stay human — really, vulnerably human — when AI, algorithms, and an endless scroll are designed to do our connecting for us? Episode 150 of The Uplifters features Susan Ruth, a filmmaker, songwriter, painter, and host of the nearly 500-episode Hey Human Podcast, in a conversation about the most courageous thing women over 40 can do right now: choose presence. For women navigating midlife reinvention, menopause life changes, and the kind of perimenopause-era identity shifts that make you question everything, Susan's story is a powerful reminder that human-to-human sameness is still our most radical resource.In this episode, you'll learn why starting over at 40 or 50 often begins not with a plan but with a single act of connection — and how midlife women are uniquely positioned to lead that charge. Susan's journey from despair in a grocery store parking lot to nearly 500 conversations about what makes us human is a masterclass in turning pain into purpose, staying brave when it would be easier to go numb, and building a second act that refuses to look away.What You'll Learn:How to stay connected in midlifeWhy perimenopause and midlife reinvention are uniquely vulnerable to digital sedation — and how to resist itHow women over 40 can build courage capital through creative expression and community rather than isolationThe midlife mindset shift from consuming to making — and why it changes everythingWhy starting over at 40+ often begins with one small human moment, not a master planHow women in their second half of life can use proximity and presence as antidotes to despair — and fuel for meaningful changeKey Timestamps:0:00 — Introduction and 150-episode celebration~3:00 — The grocery store moment that launched Hey Human Podcast~8:30 — On seeing sameness before difference: "Evening, sister"~13:30 — Nearly 500 episodes and what they've taught her about humans~16:45 — On knowing who you are and why it protects you from the machine~18:30 — The TikTok spiral: recognizing the sedative for what it is~20:30 — Midlife fatalism vs. radical presence~23:00 — Art as defiance: making things when the world gets heavy~26:00 — Starting in your own backyard~32:30 — Nominating Julia CricoKey Takeaways:For women over 40 navigating loneliness: Human connection is still your most renewable resource — and it often starts with showing up for one person close to home.For midlife women in perimenopause or transition: When everything feels out of control, making something — anything — is an act of agency and defiance.For second-act career changers and midlife entrepreneurs: You don't need expertise to start. Susan knew nothing about podcasting. She just knew she couldn't stop asking her question. Nearly 500 episodes later, she's glad she began."Joy is a form of rebellion. Do not be afraid of your own happiness. Be joyful — that's the gift you give to the world."— Susan RuthResources & Links:Susan Ruth on all platforms: @susanruthism (Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube)Susan's music: Search "Susan Ruth" on Apple Music and all major streaming platformsHey Human Podcast: Available wherever you get podcastsRelated episodes: Susan McPherson (Ep. 85) | Mara Richards Bim (Ep. 31)About Susan Ruth:Susan Ruth is a filmmaker, songwriter, visual artist, and podcaster based in Los Angeles. She is the creator and host of Hey Human Podcast, a nearly 500-episode exploration of what makes us human — and what keeps us from fully becoming so. A fierce advocate for independent art and live performance, Susan has spent her career making work that insists on human connection as an act of both courage and rebellion. Find her @susanruthism across all platforms.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savas | @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasFacebook: Aransas Savas | Substack: theuplifterspodcast.comKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, perimenopause motivation, midlife purpose women, second act career women, midlife dreams women, perimenopause fresh start, human connection midlife, midlife loneliness women, women over 40 success stories, midlife glow up, 40+ women entrepreneurs, midlife awakening women, inspiring women over 40, growth mindset women over 40, AI and human connection, staying human midlife Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  19. 171

    Saying Yes to Yourself in Midlife

    Picture a 200-year-old barn on a New England flower farm, the kind of place where the air smells like hydrangeas and history, and the stone fence bring you back to that Robert Frost poem you memorized in high school. Now picture the woman who built that life — not inherited it, not stumbled into it — but willed it into existence through decades of patient dreaming and one very courageous conversation.That woman is Wendy Harrop, and the moment I walked into her world at The Phineas Wright House in Massachusetts, I understood immediately why every woman who visits leaves changed. There’s something about being in a space that someone created entirely by saying yes to herself, and only herself, that gives you permission to wonder: what would I build if I stopped waiting for someone to hand me the key?Wendy grew up in California, but her heart always belonged to New England. Her mother is from Massachusetts, and childhood visits planted a seed that took decades to bloom. She packed for a cross-country move three times as an adult — twice unpacking still in California, once living in a neighbor’s guest room for two years with all her furniture in storage — and even then, she’ll tell you she was living a dreamy life.But living the life she had wasn’t the same as having the life she wanted. For twenty years, Wendy had been building her world around the hope that the right person, her husband, an investor, someone, would finally see how great she was and hand her the life she deserved. Then in January 2020, a coach said to her, “No one is sitting around thinking of ways to make your life better. You write your own permission slip.” And Wendy thought: oh. OH. If I’m her... I’m done waiting.She’d been a wedding planner for thirty years, an entrepreneur surrounded by people with corporate jobs who made her feel like she was doing it wrong. She’d been what she calls “high-functioning codependent,” setting herself on fire so everyone else could be warm. She’d been waiting for her husband to say yes to her dreams. And then a coach in a room full of women asked her a question she wasn’t expecting: “If you were in full freedom, would you be with him?” She didn’t even know that was an option.Nine months she sat in the question of her marriage. And then she had the most courageous conversation of her life. Twenty-two years of marriage ended with a fifteen-second outburst and then a very practical discussion about finances. “My courage set both of us free,” she says. And she means it: her ex is happy. Sometimes when we say yes to ourselves, we give others permission to finally do the same.This full-body yes changed everything for Wendy. But saying yes is where a lot of us get stuck, because even if the yes feels easy, the how often feels terrifying. So in this episode, we dig into what it actually takes to give yourself permission before you have all the answers, how Wendy maintained her courage when everything was uncertain, and the morning practice that became the through-line of her YES life.Here’s what we know about midlife women and transformation: the belief that we can change, what researchers call self-efficacy, is one of the strongest predictors of whether we actually will. External validation (like Wendy’s friend saying “she’s living the dream and she knows it”) doesn’t just feel good; it literally rewires how we perceive our own capability. And the women who make the biggest leaps in midlife often describe a similar pattern: a moment when they stopped outsourcing permission and claimed it for themselves. The research calls it agency. Wendy calls it writing your own permission slip. Either way, it changes everything.Listen to this episode if...You’ve been waiting for someone else to give you permission to change your life — a partner, a boss, a bank account, a sign from the universe.You’re in a relationship (or a job, or a town, or a version of yourself) that looks fine from the outside but feels more like tolerating rather than living.You’ve been telling yourself you can’t make a move until you know exactly how it’s all going to work out.3 Ways Wendy Shows Us How to Build Our Courage Capital:She practices waiting as an active, creative choice. Wendy waited twenty-four Mother’s Days to become a mom, three cross-country attempts to reach New England, and two decades in a marriage before the courageous conversation to end it. But she wasn’t miserable in the middle. She was enjoying the present while keeping her dreams alive.She claims agency as a radical, learnable act. Writing your own permission slip isn’t a one-time event; it’s a practice of recognizing that no one is coming to hand you the life you want.She has courageous conversations before she has all the answers. Wendy ended her marriage before she knew exactly how she was going to make it work. She didn’t have a plan. She had a morning practice, a community of wise women, and the conviction that her yes would unlock the how. (And it did — for both of them.)Lift Her UpExplore Wendy’s world at phineaswrighthouse.com — from solo retreats in her 200-year-old barn to culinary trips in France for women ready to say yes to their next chapter. You can also listen to her podcast, Say Yes to Yourself!, wherever you get your podcasts, and find her on Instagram at @phineaswrighthouse.If you loved this story...For more stories of women who rewrote their own permission slips, explore: Susannah Ludwig’s episode (Academy Award-nominated producer turned life coach), Candy Motzek’s episode (recovering corporate executive turned women’s business coach), and Aditi Sethi’s episode (physician and end-of-life doula on living fully present).If this episode moved you, share it with someone you love. Share it with a woman who might be ready for a little loving nudge to say yes to herself. Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  20. 170

    Midlife Private Parts: A Love Note to Female Friendship in Our 50s

    Dina Aronson and Dina Alvarez: Creating Midlife Private Parts - An Anthology for Women over 40What happens when two women meet in their fifties and decide that the stories being told about midlife women are incomplete? Dina Aronson, a former attorney turned pro-age advocate and writer, and Dina Alvarez, a freelance writer and co-founder of SomosPadres, created Midlife Private Parts: Revealing Essays That Will Change The Way You Think About Age—an anthology that's reshaping how we talk about midlife transformation, menopause, aging, and what's possible after 40. These two powerhouse editors met through a serendipitous "midlife blind date" and built a creative partnership that's now giving voice to diverse women's experiences of stepping into the 40+ zone and reimagining what comes next. In this episode, we explore how they transformed a cultural need into a community, what it takes to build something meaningful during midlife reinvention, the courage required to pursue big dreams despite feeling unprepared, and why midlife friendships become the foundation for our most important work. If you've ever wondered whether it's too late to start something new, or felt unseen by the narratives being told about your age, this conversation is for you. This is a story about women over 40 reclaiming their narratives, building courage capital together, and refusing to settle for the limited stories culture offers them.What You'll LearnThe power of midlife friendships and creative collaboration — Understand why these years are uniquely positioned for deep partnership and meaningful work alongside other womenHow midlife women are leading cultural conversations about aging — Discover what it takes to publish an anthology that centers diverse women's voices and challenges narrow narratives about the second half of lifeMenopause, mortality, and the stories we're not telling — Explore taboo midlife topics (menopause, death, sexuality, aging) and why representation matters for women navigating these transitionsBuilding courage capital through community — Learn why readiness is not an individual practice but a community effort, and how to identify your allies and amplifiers in midlifeStarting a meaningful project when you don't feel qualified — Understand how decades of lived experience qualify you to do bold creative work, even without traditional credentialsWhat midlife women uniquely offer the world — Recognize the pattern recognition, wisdom, and crystallized intelligence that make midlife the ideal time for innovation and creative endeavorsKey Timestamps0:00 - Introduction and Aransas's connection to Midlife Private Parts3:45 - Meeting Dina Aronson and Dina Alvarez, editors of the anthology5:15 - How the book came to life and what makes it special7:00 - The themes within the anthology: vulnerability, community, and sisterhood10:30 - What topics feel most taboo? Death, menopause, and pleasure14:30 - Why representation and seeing ourselves matters16:45 - The serendipitous "midlife blind date" that started it all18:00 - How two women met post-50 and built a creative partnership20:30 - Adult friendship in midlife and why it matters for mental and physical health23:00 - Overcoming the "am I ready?" question and imposter syndrome29:30 - Dina Aronson's journey from attorney to writer (saying "I am a writer")32:45 - Dina Alvarez on readiness and community: building your support system first35:00 - What resources you've built throughout your life that are ready to use36:45 - Priority practices for body, mind, and spirit at midlife38:15 - What's next? Dina Alvarez embracing public speaking and interviews39:30 - Dina Aronson's dream: turning essays into a Hulu anthology series41:00 - Nominations: Susan Koff (Uncommon Threads) and Jessica Fine (Breathtaking)44:30 - Where to find Dina Aronson and Dina Alvarez and the bookKey TakeawaysFor midlife women seeking career reinvention: Identity precedes action. You don't need perfect credentials or previous experience to pursue something new in midlife. Decades of lived experience and pattern recognition are qualifications in themselves. Say "I am" before you feel completely ready.For women over 40 navigating major life transitions: Readiness is not an individual practice—it's a community effort. Build your support system first, then take the leap with people who believe in you. Your friends become your collaborators, and your collaborators become your deepest friendships.For women seeking representation and visibility: The stories we tell shape what feels possible. When culture stops telling our stories, we lose evidence of what's achievable. Create the representation you need to see. Share your story so other women know they're not alone and understand what's possible for them.For anyone feeling like they don't belong: Every major accomplishment in your life started with saying yes despite doubt. Short-term awkwardness is always worth enduring to avoid long-term regret. The worst thing that happens is you learn something and move forward."There's really no such thing as a midlife beginner, because you do bring all of those sort of layers of experience like becoming like this jumping off platform so that you're never starting from zero or scratch." — Dina AronsonResources & LinksMidlife Private Parts: Revealing Essays That Will Change The Way You Think About Age — MidlifePrivateParts.comDina Aronson's Patina Newsletter — Patina with Dina Aronson on SubstackDina Aronson on Instagram — @patina_lifeDina Aronson on LinkedIn — Dina AronsonDina Alvarez's A Few Good Things — SubstackThe Uplifters Podcast — theuplifterspodcast.comAbout Dina AronsonDina Aronson is a writer, editor, and pro-age advocate passionate about reframing how culture talks about aging and midlife women. A former attorney who spent years in legal practice and law firm management, she pivoted careers at 51 to pursue writing and advocacy work. She founded the Patina blog, now a popular Substack newsletter, where she explores aging through an honest, curious midlife lens. As co-editor of Midlife Private Parts: Revealing Essays That Will Change The Way You Think About Age, Dina is leading important conversations about what it means to age authentically in a youth-obsessed culture. She serves on the Governing Board of America Needs You and the Influencer Council of Uncommon Threads. She lives between New York City and Miami with her husband.About Dina AlvarezDina Alvarez is a writer, editor, and community builder who has spent her career amplifying underrepresented voices. She began as a freelance writer covering education and lifestyle topics for publications like Big Apple Parents, then co-founded SomosPadres, the first bilingual parenting publication for Hispanic families in New York City. Her transition into micro-blogging about midlife women led her to co-create Midlife Private Parts, an anthology that gives voice to diverse stories about stepping into the 40+ zone and navigating midlife transformation. Dina is dedicated to connecting women across generations and creating opportunities for midlife women to share their stories and build community. She is the mother of two adult sons and lives in New York City with her husband.About Your HostAransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts. Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywordsperimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women entrepreneurs over 40, midlife women aging, female creativity midlife, women 40s new career Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  21. 169

    Rewriting the Mother Code at 43

    Discover how award-winning journalist Ruthie Ackerman challenged every motherhood myth and became a first-time mother at 43 in this powerful episode about midlife reinvention and career change. In this conversation, we explore Ruthie's journey from believing she inherited a "flaw" that made her unsuitable for motherhood to writing the critically acclaimed memoir "The Mother Code." Learn how she navigated perimenopause career change, questioned limiting beliefs, and discovered alternative models of motherhood that allowed her to pursue both creative work and caregiving.If you're a midlife woman wondering whether it's too late to start over during menopause, change careers, or pursue your creative dreams, this episode offers proof that life after 40 can include profound transformation. Ruthie shares practical strategies for building courage capital through writing, scheduling your brave work, and learning to receive support—essential wisdom for any woman pursuing midlife dreams.What You'll Learn:How to change careers after 40 with authenticity — Ruthie's path from journalism to memoir writing and book coachingStarting over during menopause with creative courage — Becoming a first-time mother at 43 and pursuing writing simultaneouslyBuilding confidence after 40 as a creative professional — Practical strategies for scheduling your brave workPerimenopause motivation for women writers — Turning down the volume on your inner critic while creatingWomen over 40 rewriting their stories — Questioning inherited beliefs and family narrativesMidlife transformation through authentic storytelling — How memoir writing became Ruthie's path to courageSecond act career success stories — From published journalist to acclaimed memoirist and book coachKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction4:00 - The family narrative that shaped Ruthie's entire life9:00 - Discovering alternative models of "outlaw motherhood"17:00 - The courage to write when your inner critic screams24:30 - Over-functioning and learning to receive support31:00 - Her first book deal fell through, then Random House said yes (after 37 rejections)37:00 - Uplifting other uplifters: Sloane Davidson nominationKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: Success isn't about being fearless—it's about doing the work scared and showing up consistently with a calendar block that says your work mattersFor women over 40 seeking purpose: Question the stories you've inherited. Sometimes our most limiting beliefs are just narratives waiting to be investigated with a journalist's curiosityFor perimenopause creatives: You don't need to silence your inner critic, just actively choose not to listen while you create your most authentic workFeatured Quote:"The only thing I could think is that continuing to write is the most worthy, courageous thing that I could do." — Ruthie AckermanResources & Links:Ruthie's memoir: "The Mother Code: My Story of Love, Loss, and the Myths That Shape Us"Instagram: @ruackermanLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ruthieackermanThe Ignite Writers Collective (Ruthie's book coaching practice)Ruthie's Substack: "The Spark" (monthly recommendations, craft lessons, and writer spotlights)About Ruthie Ackerman:Award-winning author Ruthie Ackerman's writing has appeared in Vogue, Glamour, O Magazine, The New York Times, The Atlantic, and more. Her Modern Love essay for the New York Times became the launching point for her memoir, "The Mother Code: My Story of Love, Loss, and the Myths That Shape Us." Ruthie launched The Ignite Writers Collective in 2019 and has since become an in-demand book coach and developmental editor helping women over 40 tell their most authentic stories. A Peabody Award-winning former producer for The Colbert Report and Columbia Journalism School alumna, she became a first-time mother at 43, proving it's never too late for a second act career transformation. She lives in Brooklyn with her family.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, women writers over 40, creative careers midlife, perimenopause motivation, writing during midlife, midlife purpose women, second act career women, women 40s new career, building confidence after 40, midlife motherhood, perimenopause fresh start, memoir writing midlife, challenging limiting beliefs, alternative motherhood models, late bloomer success stories Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  22. 168

    Is It Burnout, Postpartum, or Perimenopause?

    After two decades climbing the corporate ladder in finance, Karissa Pfeffer hit what she thought was burnout. As a working mom navigating the pandemic, she blamed her exhaustion, anxiety, and brain fog on postpartum recovery and work stress. But at 41, she discovered the real culprit: perimenopause. This revelation transformed her understanding of what women over 40 experience in the workplace—and why 13% of women leave their careers due to unmanaged menopause symptoms.In this episode, Karissa shares her journey from high-achieving corporate executive to certified health coach and founder of Perimenopause Power. She reveals why midlife career changes often happen when women are struggling with undiagnosed hormonal shifts, how nervous system regulation is the missing piece in perimenopause management, and what companies must do to stop losing their most experienced female employees. If you're a woman over 40 wondering why you feel "off," or if you're an employer watching talented women walk away, this conversation will change everything you thought you knew about midlife transition and workplace wellbeing.What You'll Learn:How to recognize perimenopause symptoms in women over 40 — Why fatigue, anxiety, and brain fog aren't "just stress" and can start as early as 35Why nervous system regulation matters more than diet for perimenopause — The cortisol connection between stress, hormones, and that stubborn midlife weight gainHow women over 40 can reclaim energy during perimenopause — Simple daily practices that actually move the needle without adding more to your plateWhy 13% of women leave careers due to menopause symptoms — The shocking workplace cost of unaddressed perimenopause (and how to prevent it)What companies should do to support women in perimenopause — Practical policies that save money while keeping talented employees thrivingHow to make midlife career transitions with hormonal shifts — Why understanding your body changes everything about navigating work and life after 40Starting over at 40 as an entrepreneur with perimenopause — How Karissa built a thriving business while managing symptoms and redefining successKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction3:30 - The moment Karissa realized it wasn't burnout—it was perimenopause8:00 - Why symptoms can start at 35 and last for years before diagnosis13:00 - The breaking point: taking a company buyout at 4118:30 - Why nervous system regulation matters more than most people realize24:00 - The cortisol-perimenopause connection and midlife weight gain29:00 - Five-minute practices that actually reduce symptoms35:00 - Why 13% of women leave careers due to perimenopause40:00 - What companies must do to support women in this transition45:00 - Setting boundaries in your 40s and saying no without guilt50:00 - Redefining success: making less money but being happierKey Takeaways:For women over 40 experiencing unexplained symptoms: Perimenopause can start as early as 35. If you're exhausted, anxious, or dealing with brain fog that you're attributing to "just stress," get your hormones checked—and remember that nervous system regulation is just as important as diet and exercise.For midlife women considering career changes: Before you assume you're burnt out or failing, rule out perimenopause. Understanding what's happening in your body changes everything about how you manage your energy and make career decisions.For employers of women over 40: The cost of losing experienced female employees to unmanaged perimenopause is astronomical—$650K to $1.2 million for even small companies. Simple accommodations like flexible work policies, education, and support can save money while keeping top talent.Featured Quote:"I'm not crazy. My hormones are." — Karissa PfefferResources & Links:Karissa's Coaching Collective: Affordable group coaching for women navigating perimenopause www.perimenopause-power.com/collectiveConnect with Karissa: Instagram: @perimenopause-power; https://www.linkedin.com/in/karissa-pfeffer/ Related Uplifters Episodes:Shannon Russell: Second Act Career SuccessMelanie Cohen: Design Your Healthy Life StrategyLisa Crozier: Sobriety and Purpose After 40Jennifer Maanavi: Building Physique 57 in MidlifeAbout Karissa Pfeffer:Karissa Pfeffer is a certified health coach and founder of Perimenopause Power, dedicated to helping women over 40 understand what's happening in their bodies during perimenopause so they don't have to leave their careers. After spending over a decade in corporate finance and data analytics, Karissa experienced firsthand the devastating impact of undiagnosed perimenopause—the exhaustion, anxiety, and brain fog that she initially attributed to postpartum recovery and work stress. At 41, she took a company buyout hoping for relief, only to discover her symptoms were hormonal.Now, Karissa works with individual women through coaching and with corporations to provide education and policy changes that keep talented midlife women thriving in the workplace. Her mission is rooted in a powerful statistic: 13% of women leave their careers because of unaddressed menopause symptoms. Through Perimenopause Power, she's determined to change that number by empowering women with knowledge, practical tools, and community support. Her approach emphasizes nervous system regulation, sustainable habits, and self-compassion—helping women reclaim their energy, confidence, and careers during this often-misunderstood life transition.About Your Host:Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach specializing in helping women over 40 navigate midlife transitions, career changes, and second-act reinvention. With 20+ years of behavioral research experience partnering with companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Best Buy, she hosts The Uplifters Podcast, featuring women doing transformative work in the second half of their lives. Aransas brings both research rigor and personal experience to conversations about courage capital, midlife transformation, and building meaningful second acts. She understands the unique challenges of perimenopause and career, having navigated her own midlife reinvention while supporting thousands of women through theirs.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Aransas SavasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: Aransas SavasKeywords:perimenopause career change, women over 40, midlife reinvention, menopause second act, starting over at 40, women changing careers 40s, midlife transition women, second half of life, courage capital, midlife transformation, perimenopause symptoms women, menopause workplace support, perimenopause burnout, hormones and career, nervous system regulation perimenopause, cortisol midlife women, perimenopause weight gain, women 40s health, midlife health women, perimenopause entrepreneur, starting business during menopause, midlife career pivot, corporate women perimenopause, workplace menopause policy, women leaving careers menopause, perimenopause anxiety relief, midlife energy women, hormone balance over 40, perimenopause motivation Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  23. 167

    Starting a Nonprofit After 40

    If you’ve ever wondered, “Is it too late for me to...” the answer’s NO and The Uplifters are about to show you why. This space is for purpose-driven women who want to do big, brave things in the second half of their lives. I’m your host, Aransas Savas, and I’ve spent the last 20 years at the intersection of behavior change research and coaching.This month for the new year, we're exploring new beginnings with award-winning author Sahar Delijani, perimenopause expert Karissa Pfeffer, comedian-filmmaker Mandy Fabian, and today, Dawn Veselka, who co-founded Cards2Warriors. Welcome to the Uplifters!Listen to this episode if...* You’ve been wanting to start something meaningful but have no idea where to begin* You’re navigating chronic illness (yours or a loved one’s) and feeling invisible* You’ve been telling yourself you need all the answers before you can take the first step* You’re a caregiver who never gets asked “how are YOU doing?”* You’re wondering if it’s too late to build something new in midlifeIs there any better feeling than receiving hand-written love notes in the mail? Today’s guest, Dawn Veselka, built an entire movement around this moment. For 15 years, she’s watched her daughter Sadie navigate chronic illness and rare disease. Somewhere in that long journey of appointments and advocacy, Dawn discovered that most patients, families, and caregivers don’t only need a medical breakthrough, they also need to know someone sees them.Dawn’s StoryDawn didn’t set out to build a nonprofit. She was a radiation therapist treating cancer patients, raising a daughter with complex medical needs, living a full life that already demanded a lot from her. But being the parent of a child with chronic illness, taught her things about isolation that most people never have to understand.Sadie’s diagnosis took years to piece together. Even now, Dawn describes her daughter as having a “mix of diseases” that doesn’t fit neatly into any single category. That’s the reality for so many people living with rare diseases (there are 7,000 of them, and 95% have zero treatment options). These patients and families are navigating without a map, often without a community, frequently without anyone who truly understands.Dawn spent decades in healthcare, but starting Cards2Warriors required an entirely different skill set. She grew up in the generation where typing class was the closest thing to technology training. Now she needed to build databases, manage logistics, create tech systems secure enough to protect patient information. “When you need $30,000 to build your tech to send cards, it doesn’t compute,” she laughs. “But we finally got everything in place.”Like so many of us in midlife, who are translating our experiences into new impactful chapters, Dawn had to own not knowing. No tech background. No nonprofit experience. No clue how to fundraise at scale. Just a clear vision that people battling chronic illness deserved to feel seen, and the willingness to figure out the rest as she went. And recent neuroscientific research teaches us that our midlife brains are uniquely positioned for this kind of work. After decades of pattern recognition and problem-solving across multiple domains (career, caregiving, navigating complex systems), we’re extraordinarily well-equipped to see connections others miss and build solutions that actually work. The challenge isn’t capability. It’s overcoming the belief that major career shifts or new ventures require starting from scratch when, in fact, we’re bringing irreplaceable expertise to the table.Today, Cards2Warriors operates with a simple but powerful model: anyone can sign up to receive cards, anyone can join their card crew to write them, and they don’t require proof of diagnosis or limit support to specific diseases. They’ve built a community of warriors supporting warriors, high school students learning how to talk to people with chronic illness, and volunteers creating tangible reminders of hope. Dawn’s goal is to send 100,000 cards, and she’s well over halfway. The stories that fuel her work are profoundly moving, so grab your tissues for this episode. Her Courage PracticeTethering to Purpose Through StoryDawn’s courage practice isn’t a morning routine or meditation ritual. It’s tethering herself to the pain, both her own and the pain of the people they serve. When the tech fails or the funding falls through or she’s staring at another problem she doesn’t know how to solve, she goes back to the stories.She thinks about the patients. She thinks about caregivers who burst into tears because someone finally acknowledged their invisible work. She thinks about her own daughter Sadie, and all those years of navigating illness without a roadmap.This isn’t about toxic positivity. It’s about remembering why the work matters when everything in her wants to give up. As the stories keep multiplying, her sense of commitment does too. So when Dawn needs courage, she doesn’t have to manufacture it from thin air. She just remembers the last person who wrote to say “that card saved me today,” and she keeps going.Lift Her UpSupport Cards2Warriors by donating $5 to sponsor two cards at cards2warriors.org, or via Venmo at @Cards-to-Warriors or Zelle at [email protected] you loved this story...Explore our conversations with other women who turned personal challenges into community solutions:Angela Wilson’s episode about sending her own version of “happy mail” to honor her late mother, Amy Cohen’s episode about co-founding Families for Safe Streets after losing her son, Janelle Hill’s episode about founding Refuge Mental Health Services as a sexual abuse survivor, and Rebecca Soffer’s episode about creating Modern Loss after losing both parents early in life.Let’s chat about itWhat is the most meaningful piece of handwritten mail that you’ve received? Share in the comments. Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  24. 166

    Creative Courage at Any Age

    If you’ve ever wondered, “Is it too late for me to...” the answer’s NO and The Uplifters are about to show you why. This space is for purpose-driven women who want to do big, brave things in the second half of their lives. I’m your host, Aransas Savas, and I’ve spent the last 20 years at the intersection of behavior change research and coaching.This month for the new year, we're exploring new beginnings with award-winning author Sahar Delijani, Dawn Veselka who co-founded Cards2Warriors (sending over 48,000 cards of hope to people battling chronic illness), perimenopause expert Karissa Pfeffer, and today, comedian-filmmaker Mandy Fabian. Listen to this episode if...* You’ve been putting off a creative project because you don’t feel ready yet* You’re expanding into something new and feeling simultaneously excited and terrified* You need permission to acknowledge your fears without letting them stop you* You’re tired of feeling like you should have it all figured out before you begin* You want to understand how successful creators avoid self-doubt (spoiler: they don’t)I always thought (hoped) the Giant Iceberg of Creative Fear would get smaller over time. Turns out that’s not the case. If anything, it gets bigger.Because the more we create, the more we know what can go wrong. The more we put ourselves out there, the more aware we become of all the ways we might fail. The more we risk, the more we have to lose. It’s like Mandy Fabian says in today’s conversation: “When you start to expand, it can feel like you’re smaller because the space around you gets bigger to make space for everything that you’ve got to give.”Mandy has been making the choice to step into the bigger space over and over again throughout her creative life. As a comedian, filmmaker, and singer-songwriter, she’s built a career on saying yes to projects that scare her, projects where she’s not entirely sure she knows what she’s doing.Her latest film, Just Plus None (streaming now on Apple TV and Amazon Prime), is a romantic comedy with a twist: the protagonist doesn’t end up with anyone. Instead, she ends up with herself. It’s a film about a woman who’s messy and flawed and doesn’t know how to be a maid of honor, who has loud, unashamed sexual desires, who makes mistakes and learns to love herself where she is. It’s the kind of film that challenges what we think women in rom-coms should be like (and what we think our own journeys toward self-acceptance should look like).Creating it required Mandy to wrestle with the same noisy fears we all do, but courage alone doesn't write the script, find the funding, or push through the three weeks of intense therapy required at the start of the project. So in this episode, we talk about her actual practices for managing fear, the specific ways she processes doubt, and how she's learned to hear limiting beliefs differently (not as truth, but as challenges that prove she needs to be in the room).Her Courage PracticeMandy has developed what might be my favorite courage practice I’ve heard on this show: the therapeutic tantrum.Here’s how it works: When fear and doubt and anxiety are overwhelming, she doesn’t try to positive-think her way through it. Instead, she gives herself permission to throw a full-blown tantrum, either on a friend’s voicemail (with permission to delete without listening) or in her journal or just out loud to herself.She lets herself be “the most scaredy cat, petty, mean-spirited towards myself and anybody else.” She argues for all her limitations. She whines and stomps her feet and declares how unfair everything is and how nobody ever helps her and how she’s going to fail and everyone will laugh.And then she lets it pass.“I let that do for as long as I have to, so that it has its moment,” she explains. “And usually then I go, okay, that’s that. Now let’s work on the other part of it.”What Mandy understands is something most of us resist: those feelings need to be expressed, not suppressed. When we try to bypass them or pretend they don’t exist, they don’t go away. They just turn into a toxic filter that colors everything we see. But when we give them a neutral space to exist, acknowledge them fully, and let them run their course, they lose their power.It’s like she’s created a wind phone for her fears ((H/T Lia Buffa De Feo ), a safe place to release them so they don’t poison her creative process. And then, once the tantrum has run its course, she can ask a different question: “Okay, fun. Would you like to have a word? What would you like to see happen today?”Editor’s note: Sahar Delijani described a very similar practice on last week’s episode, in case you need more evidence in order to let those cranky, negative feelings rip.3 More Ways Mandy Fabian Shows Us How to Build Our Courage Capital:* She moves forward before she feels ready — Mandy admits she often starts projects because she’s “too stupid to believe it could ever go wrong,” driven by dreams rather than detailed plans. But once reality sets in and fear shows up, she doesn’t quit. She just acknowledges that bravery now means something different. It means continuing even after you know how hard it’s going to be. (This is the real courage, by the way: not the ignorant bliss of starting, but the clear-eyed determination to keep going.)* She keeps “we could” possibilities alive — When Mandy and her husband realized they could move to Paris (even though they weren’t going to), it reminded her that she was free to choose her path, and that those little desires probably held clues to what she was craving in her current reality.* She anchors in present-moment acceptance — “The point is to have you right here accepting what is,” Mandy says about why she practices presence. “That’s where you’re at your best self.” Rather than ruminating on past mistakes or catastrophizing about future failures, she brings herself back to now: What can I do today? What small step can I take? What would make this moment easier? It’s a practice that cuts through the overwhelm and reconnects her to her power.Lift Her UpWatch Mandy’s film Just Plus None on Amazon Prime and Apple TV. If it resonates with you (and I think it will), take two minutes to rate and review it. This is how films by independent female creators find their audiences. Your review could be exactly what another viewer needs to discover this gem.If you loved this story...Start with Kara Cutruzzula’s episode about building a multifaceted creative career, then explore conversations with other women who’ve chosen creative courage: Caroline Scruggs on leaving the music industry to create freedom, Cleyvis Natera on leaving corporate to write full-time, and Julie Hartigan on pivoting from engineering to becoming a chef. Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  25. 165

    #143: What Life-and-Death Courage Teaches Us About Daily Bravery in Midlife

    If you’ve ever wondered, “Is it too late for me to...” the answer’s NO—and The Uplifters are about to show you why. This space is for purpose-driven women who want to do big, brave things in the second half of their lives. I’m your host, Aransas Savas, and I’ve spent the last 20 years at the intersection of behavior change research and coaching.This month for the new year, we're exploring new beginnings with award-winning author Sahar Delijani, Dawn Veselka who co-founded Cards2Warriors (sending over 48,000 cards of hope to people battling chronic illness), perimenopause expert Karissa Pfeffer, and comedian-filmmaker Mandy Fabian. Welcome to the Uplifters!Listen to this episode if...* You’re carrying stories that feel too big, too painful, or too important to keep inside* You’ve felt paralyzed by the question “who am I to write this/say this/share this?”* You’re looking for courage to do something big and brave this yearMost of us will never face the kind of capital C Courage that Sahar Delijani writes about, even though lately it doesn’t feel far off. The kind where speaking your beliefs can cost you your freedom, your family, your life. I’ve spent years studying courage, coaching women through their biggest transitions, and interviewing hundreds of people doing brave things. But this conversation taught me so much about the ways great big acts of courage inform the little daily ones, and vice-versa.Sahar writes about people who faced imprisonment, execution, and systematic persecution. But telling their stories? That took a different kind of courage entirely. The daily kind. The kind that shows up when you’re sitting at your laptop, terrified, wondering who gave you permission to tell these stories. The kind that requires you to keep going when every voice in your head says you’re not ready, you’re betraying secrets, you don’t have the right.That’s the courage most of us actually need to learn: how to do the thing we feel called to do even when we’re scared, how to tell the truth even when we were taught to keep it hidden, how to take up space with our voices, our stories, our work, especially in midlife when so much of the world tells us our time has passed.So when Sahar Delijani, whose debut novel Children of the Jacaranda Tree has been translated into 32 languages and published in more than 75 countries, agreed to talk with me, I wanted to understand: How does witnessing extraordinary Courage inform the ordinary courage we need every day? How do you build the stamina to keep doing brave things when the work requires revisiting trauma again and again? And what can those of us doing “smaller” brave things (career changes, creative pursuits, truth-telling in our own lives) learn from someone who’s documenting capital-C Courage?Turns out: everything.Her StorySahar grew up in the aftermath of the 1979 Iranian revolution, in the shadow of her family’s activism and imprisonment. Her parents were among thousands arrested in 1983 for their political beliefs. Her mother was pregnant at the time. Sahar was born in Evin prison, Tehran’s notorious political prison, and spent her first month there before her grandparents raised her alongside her brother and cousin (also born in prison).The 1988 mass executions took her uncle’s life while her parents, fortunately, had already been released. But the trauma didn’t end when her parents came home. It lived in the silence, in the things they couldn’t talk about, in the ways their imprisonment shaped every aspect of their lives even after their release.For years, Sahar didn’t talk about any of it either. Moving to California at age 12 meant geographic distance from Iran, but it also meant the stories stayed locked away. It wasn’t until she decided to write Children of the Jacaranda Tree that she began to unlock those stories, not just for herself, but for others who lived through similar experiences around the world.The book chronicles the lives of families affected by political imprisonment in Iran, weaving together stories of life inside prison walls and the ripple effects on everyone outside them. It follows children born into this tragedy, including those born in prison like Sahar, as they grow up and decide what to do with the legacy of their parents’ courage and sacrifice. Writing it meant breaking decades of silence, meant asking her parents to revisit their most painful memories, and making private family trauma public.In this episode, we talk about what it takes to keep going when your work requires you to revisit the hardest parts of your life again and again, how she rebuilds her courage between projects, how she processes the weight of speaking for others, how she maintains boundaries while staying open to her own feelings, and how she remembers why these stories matter when the cost of telling them feels too high.5 Ways Sahar Delijani Shows Us How to Build Our Courage Capital:* She reconnects to purpose when doubt creeps in. When Sahar questions whether she has the right to tell these stories, she comes back to a simple truth: these stories need to be told, and she’s the one with the passion, knowledge, and proximity to tell them. That clarity of knowing why the work matters beyond her own fear keeps her moving forward. (You can do this too: write down why your brave thing matters. Keep that visible. Come back to it when you forget.)* She builds community to sustain the hard work. Sahar doesn’t try to write about trauma in isolation. She surrounds herself with friends, family, and fellow artists who understand what she’s carrying. They give her energy when her own runs low, remind her why the work matters, and help her process the weight of it all. (Your turn: identify 2-3 people who can hold space for your brave work. Tell them what you’re doing and ask them to check in with you.)* She gives herself permission to feel everything. Rather than pushing through difficult emotions to stay “productive,” Sahar lets herself feel desperate, tired, lazy, or whatever shows up. She trusts that living through feelings honestly is how they move through and make space for the next thing. (Try this: when hard feelings come up, ask yourself “what am I really feeling right now?” and let yourself have that feeling without judgment.)* She takes breaks without guilt. Between writing projects, Sahar steps away from the work entirely. She reads, cooks, travels, swims, spends time with loved ones, all without beating herself up for not being “productive.” She’s learned that rest isn’t procrastination; it’s how we build the reserves to do the next hard thing. (What would it look like for you to schedule guilt-free breaks into your brave work?)* She reframes whose story this is. When the weight of speaking for others felt too heavy, Sahar shifted perspective: yes, these are her family’s stories, but she’s the medium connecting them to people who need to hear them. She’s not the hero or the villain of this story, but the translator, the bridge, the person willing to do the hard work of making private pain into public wisdom. (Where can you reframe your role from “I must get this perfect” to “I’m here to connect and translate”?)Lift Her UpSahar’s second novel, For Every Person You Kill, arrives in spring 2027. In the meantime, pick up Children of the Jacaranda Tree wherever books are sold—it’s one of those rare books you’ll want to reread immediately just to savor the language and sit with the characters a little longer.If you loved this story...Did you know that every woman on the Uplifters podcast is nominated by someone she inspires? This means you and I get to chat with the most inspiring women -- the ones who inspire the women who inspire us!Our current thread:Susan Jaramillo→Kate Tellers from The Moth→Cleyvis Natera→ Deesha Philyaw → Mo Browne – Djeli Said → Hala Alyan → Sahar Delijani who nominates Yeldā Ali as her Uplifter: “Artist, activist, innovator, community organizer, Yeldā is a true uplifter!”Let’s Chat!What story have you been afraid to tell? What would it take to start telling it this week, even just to yourself, even just in a journal? Share in the comments, your courage might be exactly what another person needs to hear. Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  26. 164

    Building Connection in Lonely Times: Celine McGee and The Compliment Squad

    In an era of unprecedented social isolation and loneliness, one Philadelphia engineer is combating disconnection one compliment at a time. Celine McGee, who works in corporate telecommunications by day, has spent over a decade approaching strangers with genuine compliments and cards that say "pass it on"—creating what she calls the Compliment Squad.What started with a single compliment during a neighborhood walk has evolved into a grassroots movement challenging our collective fear of talking to strangers. Celine shares how she overcomes the vulnerability of approaching people she's never met, why creating connection matters more than perfection, and how small acts of courage can create butterfly effects of kindness.In this conversation, we explore the crisis of loneliness affecting our communities, practical strategies for overcoming social anxiety, and why sometimes the bravest thing we can do is simply tell someone their shoes look cool. Whether you're an introvert wanting to connect more or someone who believes we need more human interaction in our increasingly digital world, this episode offers both inspiration and practical tools for building courage through everyday connection.What You'll Learn:How to overcome fear of talking to strangers — Practical strategies for approaching people you don't know with genuine complimentsBuilding everyday courage through small acts — Why starting with simple compliments can help you develop confidence in all areas of lifeCreating community connection in isolated times — How one person's small initiative can ripple out to create meaningful changeNavigating social anxiety with purpose — Turning awkwardness into opportunities for authentic human connectionSustaining passion projects alongside demanding careers — Strategies for keeping personal missions alive when corporate work drains your energyKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction 4:30 - The origin story of the Compliment Squad 11:45 - Overcoming the vulnerability of approaching strangers 18:20 - How compliments can bridge social divisions 24:15 - Katie's wisdom: "If you haven't been punched in the face, you're fine" 28:45 - Enlisting amplifiers to grow the movement 33:00 - Courage practices for connectionKey Takeaways:For anyone struggling with social connection: Compliments are one of the lowest-barrier ways to break the ice and create authentic moments with strangersFor those managing fear of rejection: Research shows that even imperfect compliments land well—the intention matters more than perfect executionFor community builders: Creating movements doesn't require perfection or grand gestures; it starts with doing more of what already feels good and inviting others to join youFeatured Quote:"If you haven't been punched in the face so far, you're fine. So my point is like I compliment a lot of people I've never seen before or spoken to, and it's fine. So people shouldn't be scared just to give a compliment in any setting." — Celine McGee (quoting her friend Katie)Resources & Links:Follow the... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  27. 163

    How to Ask for Help Without Apologizing with Neeshi's Gita Vellanki

    What if the key to building your midlife business isn't having all the answers but knowing how to ask the right questions? In this episode, we meet Gita Vellanki, founder of Neeshi, who left a successful career in high tech to create functional foods for women navigating menstruation, perimenopause, and menopause. After watching her daughter struggle with debilitating periods and experiencing her own perimenopausal chaos, Gita drew on her grandmother's wisdom about food as medicine and created a line of chocolate spreads designed to help women feel better without sacrificing pleasure.But Gita's journey from corporate executive to midlife founder wasn't about having the perfect credentials. With zero background in CPG or marketing, she had to learn how to leverage the resources she did have, get specific about her gaps, and become her own loudest advocate. This is a masterclass in starting over at 40, asking for help without apologizing, and building courage capital one brave choice at a time.Whether you're considering a perimenopause career change, wondering about starting a business during menopause, or simply trying to figure out how to take the leap when you don't feel ready, Gita's story offers practical wisdom for women over 40 starting businesses and reclaiming their power in the midlife transition women experience.What You'll Learn:How to start a business after 40 without feeling ready - Gita shares how she began Neeshi with zero CPG experience, learning to leverage what she had rather than waiting for perfect credentialsPerimenopause business strategies for women entrepreneurs - How to identify and fill skill gaps like marketing while building a mission-driven companyStarting over at 40 with limited resources - Practical advice on using your existing network, even when it feels irrelevant to your new ventureWomen over 40 overcoming self-doubt as founders - Why following up doesn't mean being pushy, and how to stop interpreting silence as rejectionMidlife career change through purpose-driven work - How personal pain can become the foundation for meaningful business that helps othersBuilding confidence after 40 as a female founder - The courage practice of asking for help without apology, and trading stress for realistic timelinesMenopause wellness business success stories - From frozen products to hero spreads: how to pivot without judgment when your first idea doesn't workKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction 2:15 - How Neeshi was born from watching her daughter suffer 6:30 - Gita's own perimenopause journey and discovering the power of functional food 10:00 - The pivot from frozen products to chocolate spreads 13:15 - Leveraging your existing resources even when they feel irrelevant 16:45 - The marketing challenge and learning new skills at 40+ 20:00 - Why asking for help became her superpower 23:00 - Trading stress for timeline: letting go of artificial urgency 26:45 - Supporting Neeshi and connecting with GitaKey Takeaways:For... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  28. 162

    Why Midlife Is Actually Peak Entrepreneurship Age - From Beauty Executive to "Geriatric Founder" at 44

    What happens when health challenges in your 40s become the catalyst for a complete career reinvention? In this episode, Kimberle Lau shares her journey from 20-year beauty industry executive to founder of Bake Me Healthy, an allergen-free, plant-based baking company. After pregnancy-induced food intolerances and a breast cancer risk diagnosis, Kimberle left corporate America at 44 to build a mission-driven business serving people with food allergies and intolerances.She opens up about being a self-described "risk-averse" founder, discovering that the average founder age is actually 45 (not 25), and learning to focus on "the next three steps" instead of needing the entire roadmap mapped out. We talk about balancing business building with raising teenagers approaching college age, why she tracks sleep like a KPI, and how "micro-wins" serve as signals to keep going when progress feels slow.This is an honest conversation about midlife entrepreneurship women over 40, starting a business during perimenopause, women changing careers in their 40s, and building something meaningful when everyone's asking "but when will you break even?"What You'll Learn:How to change careers after 40 with purpose — Kimberle shares how 20 years of beauty industry expertise transferred to food entrepreneurship and what made her finally take the leap at 44Starting a business during midlife with family responsibilities — Navigating the reality of building a company while raising teenagers, managing mortgage payments, and planning for college tuitionPerimenopause motivation for women entrepreneurs — How health challenges became the catalyst for purpose-driven work and why midlife is actually the right time to startWomen over 40 starting businesses — Why the average founder age is 45, not 25, and what advantages decades of experience bring to entrepreneurshipBuilding confidence after 40 as a female founder — Overcoming the "am I ready?" question and learning to trust your next three steps instead of needing the full planMidlife transformation through purpose — From corporate burnout in beauty to creating inclusive, allergen-free products that serve an underserved communitySecond act career success strategies — Practical wisdom about evaluating micro-wins, managing risk strategically, and making self-care non-negotiableKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction4:00 - From beauty industry executive to food entrepreneur—the health crisis that changed everything12:00 - "Am I too risk-averse to be a founder?" and discovering the average founder age is 4518:30 - Managing the anxiety of building a business as a mom with college tuition looming24:00 - The "next three steps" approach: why you don't need the full roadmap to start28:00 - Listening to micro-wins as signals to keep going33:00 - The sleep habit tracker: treating self-care like a business KPI39:00 - Building a family business: working with her mother and involving her kidsKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: The average founder age is 45—your decades of expertise are an asset, not a liability. Starting "late" often means starting with more resources, networks, and pattern recognition than younger founders have.For women over 40 seeking purpose: Health challenges and body changes in midlife can become catalysts for meaningful work. What starts as solving your own problem can become a mission serving thousands of others.For perimenopause entrepreneurs: Risk-aversion doesn't disqualify you from founding something. Strategic risk management—having financial cushion, supportive partners, and Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  29. 161

    Starting a Mission-Driven Business After 40

    Starting over during perimenopause and midlife doesn't always mean changing careers—sometimes it means creating entirely new solutions the world desperately needs. In this episode, meet Tara Miko Ballentine, founder of Bright Littles, who transformed her experience of childhood sexual assault into a company helping parents have crucial conversations with kids about consent, boundaries, safety, and diversity.For women over 40 navigating midlife reinvention, Tara's story offers powerful proof that your second act can combine personal healing with public purpose. She launched Bright Littles during the pandemic while parenting full-time, and four years later continues building without breaking even—side hustling, pivoting constantly, and facing the unique challenges female founders encounter when seeking funding.This conversation offers practical wisdom for midlife women pursuing dreams that matter: how to start before you feel ready, how to find courage capital when everyone questions your path, and how to build something meaningful while managing all the other responsibilities of life after 40.What You'll Learn:How to change careers after 40 with purpose — Tara shares her journey from fashion and marketing to founding an education company, proving midlife career pivots can create entirely new industriesStarting over during menopause with limited resources — Learn how to launch a business while working full-time, parenting, and navigating the financial realities of midlife entrepreneurshipBuilding confidence after 40 as a female founder — Discover strategies for persisting when funding goes to men with ideas while women with products face barriersPerimenopause motivation for women entrepreneurs — How to maintain your North Star mission when the journey tests every ounce of your resolveWomen over 40 starting businesses — Practical wisdom about pivoting, learning new skills (even tech!), and building sustainable side hustlesMidlife transformation through purpose — How personal pain can fuel public mission when you're ready to turn wounds into wisdomSecond act career success stories — Real talk about what four years of building looks like without breaking even, and why mission sometimes matters more than metricsKey Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction2:15 - The pandemic moment that sparked Bright Littles6:30 - Crossing personal and business life for the first time10:00 - The "am I ready?" questions every founder asks13:00 - Why 95% of childhood sexual abuse is preventable18:15 - How to start conversations before problems happen22:00 - Pivoting from physical products to digital during tariffs26:00 - The "Periods and Polish" event and online backlash31:00 - How to support Bright Littles' missionKey Takeaways:For midlife career changers: Start with what you know, then pivot as you learn—Tara began with fashion/product experience and adapted everything as she discovered publishing, retail, and subscription modelsFor women over 40 seeking purpose: Your personal experience isn't a liability; it's your competitive advantage. Tara's childhood trauma became her deepest source of mission clarityFor perimenopause entrepreneurs: Side hustling is sustainable—Tara worked as a CMO while building Bright Littles, still consults for income, and has built something meaningful without traditional fundingFeatured Quote:"I feel so passionate about what I am doing. I think most people probably would've quit. I've not financially broke even in four years. That is not for everybody. But I feel like when I started this... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  30. 160

    A 30-Year Media Veteran on How to Be a Creator Without Niching Down

    Producer Rachel (Rachel Giordano) spent nearly 30 years climbing the entertainment industry ladder—from Barbara Walters and The View to Disney Feature Animation to iHeart Media. But at 47, she realized the traditional path wasn't letting her be fully herself. Now she runs a boutique production company, hosts The Producer Rachel Show, wrote and self-published a children's book (Santa's Secret Wishing Coin), and is helping other midlife women embrace their creative superpowers—ADHD and all.In this conversation, Rachel shares her radical "creator not consumer" mindset shift, why she refuses to "niche down" despite what every algorithm tells her, and how she's building a creative empire by doing things messy, posting for pleasure instead of obligation, and embracing every weird part of herself. If you've ever felt like you had to boil yourself down to one thing to be "marketable," this episode will give you permission to be the umbrella.What You'll LearnHow to shift from consumer to creator mindset (and why a time audit will shock you)The "do it messy" approach to getting your work out into the world without waiting for perfectWhy "niching down" might be killing your creativity—and what to do insteadHow to know what to outsource when you're building something new (hint: if it doesn't move the needle, delegate it)Why comparison is the creativity killer—and how to disconnect from other people's timelinesThe parking lot moment that changed everything for Rachel's businessHow to invest in yourself before you feel "ready" (and trust the gap will fill itself)Why your ADHD might be your midlife superpower, not a problem to fixHow to create content you actually want to make instead of content you think you "should" makeThe surprising way editing became Rachel's meditation practiceWhy being a "multi-hyphenate" at 40+ is actually your competitive advantageHow to support small creators (it's free and takes seconds)Timestamps00:00 - Welcome & Rachel's background in entertainment03:15 - The creator vs. consumer mindset shift06:50 - How behavior change works: focus on what you're gaining, not giving up08:30 - Posting for pleasure vs. obligation13:30 - Comparison as the thief of joy (and creativity)16:55 - "Everyone has ideas. Only entrepreneurs act on them."18:00 - The magic of consistent, small actions19:57 - Why your unique perspective is irreplaceable (even in the age of AI)23:00 - The "network umbrella" approach to personal branding25:00 - Being the brand instead of picking one niche27:00 - Investing in yourself: hiring the VA, the cleaning service, the meal prep29:00 - Why Gen X is the most resourceful generation30:45 - Ageism and why we're going to team up and do our own things31:12 - Getting out of toxic hustle culture and respecting your own boundaries33:30 - The origin story of Santa's Secret Wishing Coin37:00 - Teaching kids about believing, giving, and manifestation38:30 - Becoming your own publisher and what that takes40:00 - "Nobody cares... until they do"42:00 - Growing community before you launch43:00 - Rachel nominates Dr. Rhonda Vaughn44:30 - Support small creators: it's free and changes livesKey Takeaways✨ Shift from consumer to creator: Do a time audit. You probably have more creative time than you think—you're just spending it scrolling.✨ Perfect is too late. Do it messy: Start before you're ready. Go live to test ideas. Edit later... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  31. 159

    How to Set and Achieve Audacious Goals After 40 with Kiersten Barnet, Key Advisor to 100 Fortune 100 CEOs

    Discover how women over 40 are leading systemic change and tackling audacious goals. In this episode, 42-year-old Kiersten Barnet, Executive Director of the NYC Jobs CEO Council, shares how she's coordinating Fortune 100 CEOs to hire 100,000 low-income New Yorkers—and they're already more than halfway there.If you've ever wondered "is it too late to take on something impossibly big?" this conversation proves the answer is absolutely not. Kiersten reveals her practical strategies for breaking down overwhelming problems, asking better questions, and building the kind of authentic leadership that creates space for everyone behind you. From her annual "letter from the future" practice to her philosophy of "strategic neglect," she offers a masterclass in midlife ambition that's both grounded in research and beautifully human.What You'll LearnCareer Change & Midlife Reinvention:How to pivot from corporate (15 years at Bloomberg) to mission-driven leadership after 40Why women's growth mindset peaks in their 40s and how to leverage itHow to take on audacious goals without having all the answers firstWhy your "not knowing what you want to be" might actually be your superpowerStrategic career pivots for women over 40 seeking meaningful workPerimenopause & Menopause Era Leadership:How to lead major initiatives while raising small children in your 40sWork-life integration strategies that actually work (not the mythical "balance")Why scheduling self-care and date nights matters more than superhuman productivityStrategic neglect: giving yourself permission to let go of the "shoulds"Managing stress and overwhelm during perimenopause while leading high-stakes projectsPractical Midlife Success Strategies:The annual future-letter practice that turns goals into concrete action plans"Eat the frog first": why tackling the hardest thing in the morning changes everythingHow to ask the right questions of the right people when facing big problemsData collection vs. speculation: making better decisions by knowing your "customer"Why problems don't age well and how to build courage through immediate actioBreaking down impossible goals into digestible, actionable stepsWomen 40+ in Leadership:How authenticity (not fitting a mold) makes you memorable and effectiveWhy talking about your children and challenges publicly creates systemic changeThe evolution from "women couldn't make it work" to "this is the new norm"How to measure success when you're in the second half of your lifeBuilding courage capital through facing impossible-seeming challengesMidlife confidence building for women leadersSystemic Change & Social Impact:How to coordinate massive coalitions (like Fortune 100 CEOs) toward common goalsWhy breaking down big problems into digestible pieces is the only way forwardThe importance of hiring and skilling local talent for economic mobilityHow private sector leadership can drive public sector changeWhy transferable skills from hourly work matter more than ever in the AI eraKey Timestamps[00:00] Introduction to Kiersten Barnet and the NYC Jobs CEO Council's audacious goal[02:45] "I don't think I knew any of the jobs I've had existed until basically just before I had them"[04:15] How priorities shift in your 40s: from straight paths to what's right for right now[06:00] Measuring success in the second half of life[07:00] Why growth mindset peaks in your 40s[08:00] The importance of questions and curiosity in leadership[10:00]... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  32. 158

    Candace Thompson-Zachery: How Six Certifications and One Big Pivot Led a Dance Executive to Menopause Coaching at 40

    Former Dance/NYC co-executive director Candace Thompson-Zachery shares her journey from 20 years in arts advocacy to launching a menopause and wellness coaching practice at age 40. This episode explores career transitions in midlife, building courage capital through curiosity, and why women's growth mindset peaks in their 40s. Candace discusses her path from founding Dance Caribbean COLLECTIVE on a $20K budget to getting six certifications in two years, including menopause coach, wellness coach, and Clifton Strengths coach. Learn how she developed "yearning" for her work, why she views her gray hair as earned badges of honor, and practical strategies for pivoting careers without having all the answers first.What You'll LearnCareer pivot strategies for midlife including how to leverage 20+ years of experience in a new fieldMenopause and perimenopause support for women maintaining high performance during hormonal transitionsBuilding courage capital at 40+ by developing yearning instead of waiting for readinessOvercoming perfectionism and the delayed tactics of collecting endless certificationsStrengths-based leadership approaches for artists, creatives, and organizational leadersNetwork as insurance - how relationships built over decades become your safety netGrowth mindset in midlife - why women's learning capacity peaks in their 40sExecutive wellness strategies encompassing movement, nutrition, mindset, and hormonal healthHow to start before you're ready using beta testers and small experimentsReframing time after 40 - why five years feels manageable instead of dauntingTimestamps00:00 - Introduction & Nutrafol sponsorship message01:00 - Nomination from Charisma J02:00 - Welcome & intro to Candace Thompson-Zachery04:15 - 20 years in NYC's dance and arts ecosystem05:30 - Evolution from dancer to arts advocate06:45 - Founding her own dance collective on $20K08:00 - Navigating doubt vs. curiosity in career evolution10:15 - Motherhood as a catalyst for new confidence11:30 - Reframing time and readiness at 4013:30 - Career coaching and six certifications journey14:15 - Becoming a menopause coach15:00 - Community support during transitions16:30 - Network as insurance and resource inventory18:00 - Starting without all the data19:15 - Developing "yearning" for the work21:30 - Analysis paralysis vs. energizing vision23:30 - Lowering the perfectionist voice through doing24:30 - Hustle as insurance25:30 - Beliefs about aging from first to second half of life27:30 - Gray hair as earned authority29:00 - Feeling groundedness and calm at 4030:15 - Advantages of doing brave things as we age31:45 - Diminished self-consciousness about others' perceptions33:00 - When did you think you'd feel like an adult?34:00 - "It's never too late" - reframing possibilities35:30 - Finding the essence beneath the dream36:30 - What yearning feels like in daily work38:00 - Who inspires you: Sydney Mosley39:00 - How to support Candace's work40:30 - Executive wellness and menopause specialization41:30 - Closing thoughtsKey TakeawaysOn Career Pivots:You don't need all the data before making a change—you've never had all the dataStart with a beta tester or willing friend before launching publiclyYour network from decades of work becomes your insurance policHedge your bets: build the new thing while staying open to full-time workFive years of doing anything will make you... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  33. 157

    Elena Brower: How to Hold Less in Midlife

    Burnout recovery starts with slowing down. Yoga teacher Elena Brower shares how women over 40 can reduce brain fog, protect energy, and build sustainable courage.Episode DescriptionBurnout recovery isn't about doing more—it's about carrying less. In this episode of The Uplifters, legendary yoga teacher, author, and artist Elena Brower shares her journey from New York City's achievement-driven yoga world to Santa Fe's spacious creative life, offering a roadmap for women over 40 ready to trade exhaustion for sustainable energy.If you're experiencing brain fog, sleep disruptions from stress, or the physical toll of decades of overcommitment, Elena's story offers practical wisdom. She reveals how thriving in midlife means deliberately slowing down—not losing capacity, but gaining longer, richer days and protecting your nervous system from chronic overwhelm.The Hidden Cost of Burnout After 40Many women over 40 attribute fatigue, brain fog, and mood changes solely to perimenopause, but chronic stress and burnout compound these symptoms. Elena's journey demonstrates how addressing the root causes—endless commitments, external validation seeking, and poor boundaries—can improve both mental clarity and physical wellbeing.What You'll LearnBurnout Recovery Strategies:How to use Nonviolent Communication (NVC) for self-compassion and reducing internal stressWhy deliberately slowing down improves focus, energy, and decision-makingPractical techniques for setting boundaries with work and family (including stopping work at 5pm)The connection between achievement culture and nervous system dysregulationBuilding Your Midlife Mindset:How to identify what you're carrying and why (fewer grudges, less rancor, fewer debts)The "Space of Genius" framework for organizing life around what matters mostWhy seeking external validation exhausts you and how to build internal trustHow writing your stories creates retroactive healing without steeping in difficultySustainable Courage Practices:The four-step NVC process: observation, feelings, needs, and self-compassionElena's "truth has tears" writing practice for getting beyond comfortable truthsHow Zen practice builds the internal trust that replaces ambition-driven burnoutStrategies for helping teenagers and partners take responsibility for their own emotional statesWhy This Matters for Women 40+ at WorkThe midlife mindset shift Elena describes isn't about opting out—it's about opting in to sustainability. For women over 40 navigating leadership, career transitions, or simply trying to maintain performance while managing physical changes, her approach offers an alternative to pushing through exhaustion.Key TakeawaysSlower Creates Longer: Moving more slowly through your days paradoxically gives you the feeling of longer, richer days and reduces the cortisol response that worsens perimenopause symptoms.Self-Empathy Reduces Physical Stress: The four-step NVC process (observe, name feelings, identify needs, self-compassion) helps regulate your nervous system before attempting to communicate with others.Ambition and Mistrust Are Linked: The unconscious drive for external validation stems from internal mistrust. Building internal trust through practices like Zen meditation creates sustainable energy instead of burnout cycles.Nobody Owes You Anything: Releasing the belief that people owe you attention or acknowledgment is one of the most freeing acts for reducing resentment and its physical... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  34. 156

    When "Fine" Isn't Enough: How Catherine Clark Chose to Rebuild Instead of Tolerate

    Midlife career change takes courage. Catherine Clark shares how women over 40 can leave burnout behind, trust impermanence, and create what's next.DESCRIPTION:After 30 years of building a successful branding agency, Catherine Clark made a radical choice in her 50s: she walked away. In this conversation, Catherine shares the truth about midlife career change—how to recognize when partnerships drain your energy, why movement unlocks emotional breakthroughs, and how women over 40 can reimagine success on their own terms.This is a powerful story about burnout recovery, surrendering the need to push through, and building something fluid and graceful in midlife. If you've ever felt trapped by the success you've created, this episode will give you permission to move.IN THIS EPISODE:[00:00] Introduction: Reimagining success in the second half of life[01:28] Catherine's journey: 30 years in branding and the ecosystem that started to fray[04:06] Why women are trained to tolerate energy-depleting relationships[06:24] The courage to address stagnation and trust what's on the other side[08:11] Accepting that change happens whether we choose it or not[09:42] The ocean and the wave: Thich Nhat Hanh's philosophy on impermanence[14:30] What horses taught Catherine about movement as medicine[35:42] The danger of being too strong: when resilience keeps us stuck[36:52] Why surrender requires more strength than pushing through[38:04] Building CREATRIS with fluidity and grace[40:37] How moving your body helps you move emotionallyKEY TAKEAWAYS:✨ Energy-multiplying vs. energy-depleting relationships: Learn to recognize the difference✨ Everything has to work together: career, family, values—your ecosystem matters✨ Movement is medicine: Physical movement unlocks emotional breakthroughs✨ Surrender isn't weakness: Sometimes the bravest thing is to stop pushing✨ Midlife opens doors: When children launch and parents age, new chapters emergeABOUT CATHERINE CLARK:Catherine Clark is the founder of CREATRIS and spent nearly 30 years building a successful branding agency, Clarkmcdowell, working with companies like Starbucks and PepsiCo. After recognizing that her partnership and business model no longer fueled her energy, she made the courageous decision to start fresh in her 50s, creating something more aligned with fluidity, grace, and her evolving values.RESOURCES MENTIONED:• Thich Nhat Hanh's philosophy on impermanence• Gyrotonics (movement practice)• Caroline Weaver / The Locavore (NYC)CONNECT WITH ARANSAS:Subscribe to the Uplifters podcast for weekly conversations with women doing big, brave things in midlife and beyond.TAGS:#midlifemindset #careerchange40 #womenover40 #burnoutrecovery #midlifecareerchange #strongat40plus #thrivingmidlife #secondhalflife #perimenopause #menopause #womenleadership #careertransition Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  35. 155

    Hala Alyan on Motherhood, Identity, and Resilience

    About This EpisodeJoin host Aransas Savas in a powerful conversation with Hala Alyan, a Palestinian-American poet, writer, clinical psychologist, and mother, as they explore the intersections of identity, motherhood, creativity, and social engagement.Key Topics Discussed:Navigating multiple identities as a Palestinian-AmericanThe role of motherhood in understanding personal and collective experiencesCreative writing and storytelling as forms of witness and resistanceAccountability, personal growth, and social responsibilityTimestamps00:00 - Introduction to Hala Alyan01:09 - Exploring Personal Identities03:20 - The Complexity of Cultural Identity12:35 - Motherhood and Storytelling25:32 - Raising a Child with Awareness and Compassion34:05 - The Power of Mundane Moments40:10 - Building Supportive Relationships42:11 - Creative Pursuits and LearningAbout Hala AlyanHala Alyan is a Palestinian-American poet, writer, clinical psychologist, and mother based in Brooklyn. She is the author of a memoir and continues to explore themes of identity, displacement, and resilience through her writing and creative work.The Uplifter ThreadDid you know that every woman on the Uplifters podcast is nominated by a former guest or audience member? This means you and I get to chat with the most inspiring women -- the ones who inspire the women who inspire us!Our current thread:Julie Fleischer → Susan Jaramillo→Kate Tellers from The Moth→Cleyvis Natera→ Deesha Philyaw → Mahogany Browne → Hala Alyan → who nominates Sahar Delijani and describes her as, “A remarkable human and artist, a beautiful writer, a fearless advocate for Iranian human rights.”Lift Her Up:Support Hala’s Work:Buy or borrow I’ll Tell You When I’m Home from your local bookstore or libraryAttend KAN YAMA KAN if you’re in NYC—it’s a beautiful reading series that combines poetry, fiction, memoir, and music while raising funds for monthly mutual aid causes. You can learn more about it by following Hala’s IG.Share her work with book clubs, writing groups, or friends who appreciate literature that grapples with identity, displacement, and belongingSupport Palestine:Hala emphasizes that witnessing and being moved by what you see is transformative—educate yourself about what’s happening in PalestineSupport mutual aid organizations working on the groundSupport the PodcastSubscribe to Uplifters PodcastLeave a ReviewShare with a Friend#Uplifters #HalaAlyan #Motherhood #CreativeWriting #PalestinianAmerican #Podcast Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  36. 154

    Midi Health's Joanna Strober: Perimenopause, HRT, and Starting Over at 53

    Perimenopause symptoms like hot flashes, sleep problems, and brain fog often go undiagnosed. Here's how Joanna Strober built accessible menopause care for women over 40.Perimenopause symptoms went undiagnosed for years while Joanna Strober suffered through sleepless nights, unexplained weight gain, hot flashes, and anxiety. Despite seeing multiple doctors, no one mentioned perimenopause or hormone therapy. This is her story of how personal medical dismissal became a mission to transform menopause care for women over 40.At 53, Joanna founded Midi Health—the first insurance-covered virtual care platform for perimenopause and menopause, now serving 20,000 women weekly across all 50 states.In this episode, you'll learn:✅ Why perimenopause symptoms start in your 30s or 40s (up to 20 years before menopause)✅ The truth about HRT and breast cancer risk✅ How to access insurance-covered menopause care vs. paying $1,500+ out of pocket✅ Common perimenopause symptoms beyond hot flashes: brain fog, sleep disruption, night sweats, anxiety, weight gain, vertigo✅ Why hormone therapy (HRT) has 5x less hormones than birth control pills doctors readily prescribe✅ How one woman turned medical gaslighting into a healthcare company at 53✅ The courage to talk about menopause publicly when it was considered career suicide✅ Why perimenopause care IS primary care for women over 40✅ The manifesting and visualization techniques that helped build a national healthcare platform✅ How to create feedback loops that drive operational excellence (including the brilliance of [email protected])Why This Matters for Women Over 40:Medical studies show women 40-49 experience significant work and life impacts from perimenopause, yet symptoms are routinely dismissed or misdiagnosed. This conversation breaks down the barriers keeping women from proper care and offers practical pathways to getting help.About Joanna Strober:Joanna Strober is the Founder and CEO of Midi Health, the largest insurance-covered virtual menopause care platform in the United States. After her own perimenopause symptoms went undiagnosed for years, she founded Midi at age 53 to ensure other women wouldn't suffer the same medical dismissal. She was one of the first business leaders to publicly discuss menopause on LinkedIn in 2021, helping break the professional taboo around this life transition. Under her leadership, Midi now serves nearly 20,000 women weekly with accessible, expert menopause care.Key Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction[03:15] Joanna's undiagnosed perimenopause journey[06:00] Why doctors prescribe birth control instead of HRT[07:15] The career risk of talking about menopause in 2021[10:00] Debunking the hormone therapy and breast cancer myth[15:00] How insurance coverage makes menopause care accessible[18:45] The billion symptoms of perimenopause you need to know[20:00] Starting a healthcare company at 53[23:30] Manifesting and strategic visualization in business[27:00] Serving 20,000 women weekly—the reality of scaling healthcare[30:00] Why [email protected] matters for courage capital[33:00] The future: expanding to full women's primary careResources Mentioned:• MIDI Health: www.joinmidi.com (insurance-covered menopause care)• Women's Health Initiative Study (discussed in episode)• Nutrafol (episode sponsor for hair health)Connect with The Uplifters:🎙 Website: theuplifterspodcast.com📱 Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcast and @aransas_savas📱 TikTok: @theuplifterspodcast▶️ YouTube: @theuplifterspodcast💼 LinkedIn: Aransas SavasIf You... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  37. 153

    Nutrafol’s Dr. Isabelle Raymond: The Scientist Who Made Menopause Research Personal

    Episode Description:What happens when a scientist with two decades of pharmaceutical research experience realizes she doesn't understand what's happening to her own body? Dr. Isabelle Raymond joins us to discuss her journey from studying sleep medicine and neurotoxins to becoming the Head of Clinical and Medical Affairs at Nutrafol—and why it took until 2020 for any brand to study menopausal women's hair loss. This conversation reveals the shocking gaps in women's health research, why having women designing studies matters so much, and how Isabelle's bringing both scientific rigor and personal experience to research that actually serves women's bodies.What You'll Learn:Why menopausal and perimenopausal hair thinning happen to so many womenHow Isabelle's designing studies around the outcomes that actually matter to womenWhy clinical trials historically excluded women How estrogen receptors on every organ in your body explain why menopause affects everythingHow supplement research is conductedWhy so little time has been historically spent on training doctors in menopause Time Stamps:[00:00] Introduction and Aransas's personal hair shedding story[02:30] Isabelle's background[07:00] The career pivot from pharmaceutical research to Nutrafol[11:45] Why women weren't included in clinical trials—and why that needs to change[17:30] The moment Isabelle realized she was going through perimenopause on camera[22:15] Why almost no doctors receive adequate training in menopause care[26:00] How estrogen receptors throughout your body explain perimenopause symptoms[31:40] Brain fog, the word-finding difficulties, and normalizing these experiences at work[38:20] Why Nutrafol was the first to study menopausal women specifically[42:00] The power of knowledge [48:15] How Isabelle takes care of herself while taking care of everyone else[52:30] Becoming a spokesperson and front woman after a career in the backgroundKey Takeaways:✨ Women's health has been understudied because hormonal fluctuations made research more complicated—but "complicated" doesn't mean "impossible" or "not worth doing"✨ You have estrogen receptors on every organ in your body (including your hair), which is why perimenopause and menopause affect so much more than just your reproductive system✨ The medical system's gaps aren't your fault—but you can advocate for yourself by asking questions and seeking providers who take your concerns seriously✨ Brain fog, hair changes, mood shifts, and the feeling that your body no longer works the way it used to are all legitimate symptoms worth addressing✨ When women with scientific expertise bring their lived experiences into their research, they design studies that actually answer the questions women are asking✨ Self-care isn't optional—it's essential infrastructure for doing good work in the worldResource Links: Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  38. 152

    Big Moves in Midlife and Beyond

    This special episode features three remarkable women from the Uplifters community who reached out to share their stories of transformation after 40. Elaine Perkins (64) packed up her life in Brooklyn at 60 to become a homeowner in Delaware. Adena Artale (47) looked herself in the mirror at 45 and finally pursued her childhood dream of acting. Tracy Keibler (64) became a nonprofit founder at 50 when her husband lost his job—and has since served over 8,000 lives. Their stories prove that courage doesn't have an expiration date, and reinvention is always possible.What You'll LearnHow to navigate major life transitions after 40 with confidenceStrategies for building community when starting over in a new placeWhy "new" is an advantage, not a disadvantageHow to distinguish between limiting beliefs and genuine wisdomThe practice of listening to your body's signals about what you truly needWhy telling the right people first matters when pursuing brave goalsHow to reframe failure and keep experimenting your way forwardThe importance of scheduling self-care like you schedule meetingsWhy following your dreams benefits everyone around you, not just yourselfTime Stamps00:00 - Introduction: The Late Bloomers Series Finale02:15 - Elaine's Story: Moving to Delaware at 6003:30 - The dream of homeownership and her mother's passing04:45 - What scared her most about the move06:00 - Choosing allies and amplifiers to tell first07:15 - The power of saying "I'm new here"08:30 - How loss created space for reinvention10:00 - Writing her worthiness story11:30 - Rating herself on bravery: from 7 to 1012:45 - Her next dream: Tamron Hall Show and spreading the worthiness message18:30 - Adena's Story: Becoming an actor at 4519:15 - Her sister's terminal diagnosis as a catalyst20:30 - The mirror moment: naming her sacred dream22:30 - Taking action immediately with Backstage23:45 - The uncomfortable photoshoot and learning to accept her body25:30 - Why she's not stopping for the next 53 years27:30 - Her husband and family's unwavering support29:45 - Building courage by telling the right people31:30 - The myth of "not having enough time"33:45 - Learning to listen to her body's wisdom35:15 - Tracy's Story: Starting a nonprofit at 5036:30 - What Start Senior Solutions does for seniors in crisis38:30 - Learning one problem at a time40:30 - Strengths carried forward from previous chapters43:15 - Redefining failure as experimentation44:30 - The importance of collaboration over competition46:45 - How to support Start Senior Solutions47:00 - Closing reflections on late blooming and courageKey Takeaways✓ Anxiety about NOT doing something can be a clearer signal than fear about doing it✓ Being "new" is an invitation for connection, not a deficit✓ Your body knows what your brain is still debating—learn to listen✓ Tell allies and amplifiers first; protect your dream from skeptics early✓ Worthiness isn't something you earn—it's something you claim✓ Courage compounds: each brave choice makes the next one easier✓ It's never too late... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  39. 151

    A World Record Breaking Joggler Teaches Us How to Move Past Fear of Failure

    Karly Swaim holds an unofficial world record in joggling—a sport that combines jogging and juggling. Her transformation from perfectionist paralysis to athletic courage offers practical lessons for anyone ready to stop letting fear of failure control their life.What You'll Learn:How to identify safe spaces for growth and experimentationPractical techniques for building self-awareness and emotional regulationWhy failure is actually data (and how to use it as such)The difference between legitimate assessment and fear-based thinkingHow to turn scary new experiences into playful challengesTime Stamps:0:00 - Introduction: Meet Karly and the world of juggling3:30 - From sedentary to accidental athlete8:45 - Finding a safe place to fail at Bryant Park15:20 - The perfectionism trap and fear of failure22:10 - How juggling revealed unconscious coping mechanisms28:35 - Professional transformation and promotions33:40 - The running group scavenger hunt experiment40:15 - Preparing for the four-ball world record attempt45:50 - "Just because it's hard doesn't mean you shouldn't do it"Key Takeaways:Growth happens in environments where failure is normalized and learning is prioritizedPhysical activities can provide immediate feedback for mental and emotional states"Not ready" is often fear disguised as wisdomSmall experiments can lead to life-changing transformationsCommunity and support make courage sustainableGuest Bio: I am a 40 year old accountant with a passion for pursuing creative hobbies. My hobbies have evolved over time, with my primary focus now on joggling, which is a blend of jogging and juggling. I started joggling when I was 33 years old and am now one of the most active jogglers in the world, having done over 50 races joggling.Host Bio: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach, host of The Uplifters Podcast, and author who helps women build courage capital through research-backed strategies and real-world wisdom. Connect with her on Instagram @aransas_savas, LinkedIn linkedin.com/in/aransassavas, and her website theuplifterspodcast.com. Follow The Uplifters on Instagram @the_uplifters_podcast, TikTok @theuplifterspodcast, Facebook facebook.com/aransas, and YouTube @theuplifterspodcast.Keywords: courage building, overcoming perfectionism, late bloomer athlete, juggling sport, failure mindset, self-awareness techniques, career transformation, professional development, fear management, growth mindset, athletic identity, personal development, women's empowerment, life transitions, courage capital Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  40. 150

    Lakshmi Rengarajan: Why Your Later Life Might Be Perfect for Finding Love

    Dating coach and podcast host Lakshmi Rengarajan joins Aransas Savas to challenge everything you think you know about finding love after 40. Discover why traditional dating advice fails midlife daters, how to build authentic connections through storytelling, and why your forties and fifties might actually be the perfect time for romance.What You'll Learn:-How to reframe dating without biological clock pressures-The difference between connection and communication in early dating-Why "wasting time" with the "wrong person" might actually be valuable-How to create 15 magnetic stories that showcase your authentic self-The concept of "romantic hope" and living romantically regardless of relationship status-Why understanding dating culture is crucial before jumping in-How to date as your full, evolved self rather than a younger versionTimestamps:02:45 - Why standard dating advice fails people over 4007:30 - The advantages of dating without deadlines12:15 - Connection before communication: the real art of dating18:30 - How to prepare for dating (hint: it's not just downloading apps)22:00 - The story about yourself you need to master28:45 - The "invisible at a certain age" myth, debunked35:00 - Two-hour phone detox before dates38:15 - Living a romantic life with or without a partnerKey Takeaways:-Dating in your forties and fifties offers unique advantages when you're not rushing against biological clocks-The best connections happen when you focus on getting to know the other person rather than evaluating them as a potential partner-Learning to tell engaging stories about yourself is crucial for all relationships, not just romantic ones-"Romantic hope" is about living with an open heart, not necessarily about finding a relationshipResource Links:The Later Date Today PodcastFollow Lakshmi on social media for dating insights: @thelaterdatertoday @later_Lakshmi Guest Bio: Lakshmi Rengarajan is a dating culture researcher and coach focused on midlife dating. Host of The Later Date Today podcast, she has worked to make dating culture better for more than 15 years, from designing one-of-a-kind singles events to actually working at Match.com, studying the art of the set-up, and learning about midlife dating today.Host Bio: Aransas Savas is a leadership coach, researcher, and host of The Uplifters Podcast. Connect with her on Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Facebook, and YouTube. Visit her website at theuplifterspodcast.com.Keywords: dating after 40, midlife dating, dating coach, relationship advice, authentic connection, dating without pressure, romantic hope, dating culture, finding love later in life, second chance romance Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  41. 149

    Sari Botton: Confessions of a Late-Blooming Gen-X Weirdo

    Episode SummaryJoin host Aransas Savas as she kicks off the highly requested Late Bloomers series with memoirist and publisher Sari Botton. In this deeply resonant conversation, Sari shares her journey of publishing her memoir "And You May Find Yourself: Confessions of a Late Blooming Gen X Weirdo" after 15 years of wrestling with fear and self-doubt.Why Gen X Is the Late Bloomer Generation Sari explains how Gen Xers experienced unique childhood disruption during the sexual revolution of the 1970s, watching their parents transform from formal, structured adults into "disco ducks" - creating confusion about how to be a grown-up.Key InsightsThe Universal Fear of Being "Too Late"Every generation worries about being behind scheduleOur youth-obsessed culture promotes "30 under 30" lists that make us feel done if we haven't achieved certain milestones by arbitrary agesThe fear started for Sari at age 10 when her uncle said "you'll never be one digit again"Finding Peace With Your Timeline People who seem most at peace with their age (usually 50+) share common traits:They've stopped pretending to be who others want them to beThey've achieved enough to feel secure but had enough failures to stay humbleThey've learned what's right for them and stopped caring about what isn'tThe Permission to Tell Your StoryThe best memoirs illuminate the mundane, not exceptional experiencesFirst-person writing should always feel scary - if it doesn't, you're not doing it rightMemoir's job is to share uncomfortable feelings that everyone has but no one talks aboutPractical Writing WisdomGive yourself permission to quit every night, then choose to continue each morningWrite the version nobody will see first to get it out of your systemDon't rush to publish - sometimes we need years to become the right version of ourselves to tell our storiesThe right timing often reveals itself through gut instinctMemorable Quotes"You don't need to come up with new tricks, you just need to show them to people who haven't seen them before.""The job of the memoirist is to illuminate the mundane.""If first-person writing isn't scary, something's wrong - you're not doing it right.""I've achieved enough to feel okay where I am, and I've had enough failures to be humble."About Sari BottonAuthor of "And You May Find Yourself: Confessions of a Late Blooming Gen X Weirdo"Publisher of Oldster Magazine and Memoir LandEditor of two bestselling anthologies about loving and leaving New YorkHas been featured in Marie Claire, The New York Times Modern Love, and moreHow to Support Sari's WorkBuy her memoir in print or audiobook (narrated by Sari herself)Subscribe to her newsletters: Oldster Magazine and Memoir LandFollow her upcoming live Oldster eventsThis episode was sponsored by Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  42. 148

    Cristina Jiménez on Finding Your Voice When the World Tells You to Stay Quiet

    Episode Description: MacArthur Fellow Cristina Jimenez shares her powerful journey from living as an undocumented teenager in fear and shame to co-founding United We Dream, the largest immigrant youth-led organization in the United States. In this deeply moving conversation, she reveals how finding her voice didn't happen in isolation—it happened in community, through action, and by refusing to let fear have the final word. Cristina offers profound insights about courage, community organizing, and why moving through fear (rather than eliminating it) is the key to creating lasting change.What You'll Learn:How to build courage when the stakes feel impossibly highWhy community action multiplies individual braveryThe difference between hiding for safety vs. organizing for protectionHow to transform personal struggle into systemic changeStrategies for moving through fear rather than being paralyzed by itWhy silence and invisibility often increase rather than decrease riskKey Takeaways:Courage isn't about eliminating fear—it's about feeling afraid and taking action anywayIndividual voices become powerful through collective action and community organizingYour lived experience, however difficult, contains wisdom that the world needsMoving through fear rather than around it builds the muscle for sustained brave actionDemocracy requires all of us to participate, regardless of background or statusTime Stamps:[00:00] Introduction and Cristina's background[03:00] What it's like living as an undocumented American[08:00] How 9/11 intensified fears in immigrant communities[14:00] The transformation from fear to finding her voice[19:00] Managing hope and hopelessness in activism[24:00] How individual courage becomes collective power[30:00] Advice for taking action in overwhelming timesLift Her UpSupport immigrant communities:Donate to United We Dream (UWD) and other immigrant rights organizationsContact your representatives about comprehensive immigration reformLearn about and support local immigrant-serving organizations in your communityAmplify the conversation:Share Cristina's book Dreaming of Home with your book club or social networksAttend local town halls and community meetings where immigration policies are discussedFollow and share the stories of immigrant organizers and activistsIf You Liked This Story, Check Out These Episodes:Susie Jaramillo: The first Latina CEO of a US media company, who nominated Cristina for The UpliftersHMelissa Aviles-Ramos: NYC DOE Chancellor, who is championing immigrant student rightsost Bio: Aransas Savas is a leadership coach, behavioral researcher, and host of The Uplifters Podcast. With over 20 years of experience conducting research and design for companies like Disney, Weight Watchers, and Oprah Winfrey, she brings both analytical rigor and deep empathy to conversations about courage and change. Find her on Instagram, Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  43. 147

    First Latina NYC DOE Chancellor is Ensuring Schools Support Every Child

    Episode Description: Meet Melissa Aviles-Ramos, Chancellor of New York City Public Schools – the youngest and first Latina to lead the nation's largest school system. From growing up as the first in her family to graduate high school to now overseeing the education of nearly a million students, Melissa shares how childhood experiences with educational inequity shaped her commitment to ensuring every child receives the love, support, and excellent education they deserve.What You'll Learn:How to transform personal struggles into systemic solutionsThe power of deep listening as a leadership practiceBuilding confidence when you're the first or only in your roleCreating educational environments where every child feels seen and valuedTurning data into compassionate actionTime Stamps:00:00 Introduction and background03:00 Growing up in the Bronx, family immigration story08:00 The difference between her siblings' school experience and her own12:00 Discovering her love for writing and teaching18:00 Transition from teacher to principal to chancellor25:00 Leading during crisis: Project Open Arms32:00 Daily practices for staying connected to students and families38:00 Building courage capital and overcoming imposter syndrome44:00 Nominating Assemblywoman Catalina Cruz47:00 How to support public educationKey Takeaways:True leadership means making sure no one has to make the sacrifices your family madeCourage is built through consistent practice of showing up authenticallyThe best leaders never forget what it feels like to need supportSystemic change happens when we center the voices of those most impactedGuest Bio: Melissa Aviles-Ramos is Chancellor of New York City Public Schools, the largest school system in the nation. She was formerly the Deputy Chancellor of Family and Community Engagement and External Affairs, as well as the Chief of Staff to former Chancellor David C. Banks. In those roles, she oversaw innovative family engagement programs such as NYC Literacy Hubs and our Family Literacy Ambassadors; she also launched and led Project Open Arms, our unprecedented effort to welcome, enroll, and support 45,000-plus of our newest New Yorkers.Chancellor Aviles-Ramos began her career as an English teacher and NYC Teaching Fellow at Harry S. Truman High School in the Bronx. She later served as principal at Schuylerville Prep and then became the acting superintendent to Bronx HS District 8, 10 and 11. Chancellor Aviles-Ramos earned her bachelor’s degree from Fordham University, Master of Arts in English Education from the City College of New York, and Advanced Certificates in school and district leadership from College of Saint Rose. She is a native New Yorker, a Latina, and a proud NYCPS parent. Host Bio: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach and host of The Uplifters Podcast. She helps women recognize and develop their own courage to create positive change in their lives and communities.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  44. 146

    Deshi Singh and The Chamber of Mothers

    Episode Description: Deshi Singh went from Wall Street finance executive to co-founding Chamber of Mothers, a national nonprofit that's united 45 chapters across 30+ states to advocate for paid leave, accessible childcare, and maternal health. In this conversation, we explore how to move from overwhelm to engagement, why hope matters more than happiness, and how one social media experiment became a movement that's making mothers impossible to ignore.What You'll Learn:How to convert overwhelm into actionable change through community buildingWhy women's economic power (75% of discretionary spending by 2028) makes us unstoppable when unitedThe difference between courage and fearlessness (and why that distinction matters)How to experiment your way to your calling without needing to know the "right" answerWhy engagement, not retreat, is the antidote to feeling powerlessHow to build courage capital through values-aligned actionThe power of reframing "impossible" as "not yet"Key Takeaways:Community amplifies individual courage—you don't have to be brave aloneYour spending power is your voice—use it intentionallySmall experiments can lead to massive movementsAlignment with values trumps fear-based decision-makingMothers united are becoming impossible to ignore in policy conversationsResource Links:Chamber of Mothers: chamberofmothers.comFree membership signup and donation optionsMothers United Tour schedule and locationsFollow @chamberofmothers on social mediaGuest Bio: Deshi Singh is co-founder and board chair of Chamber of Mothers, a national nonprofit uniting moms as advocates for policy change around paid leave, childcare, and maternal health. A former finance executive with an entrepreneurial background, she's currently pursuing her master's in public health from Harvard while leading the organization's expansion to all 50 states.Host Bio: Aransas Savas is a wellbeing and leadership coach, host of the award-winning Uplifters Podcast, and author working on a book about courage capital. She helps women build the self-belief needed to do big, brave things.Connect with Aransas:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastFacebook: @aransasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comYouTube: @theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: aransassavasKeywords: women's advocacy, working mothers, paid family leave, maternal health, grassroots organizing, courage building, policy change, women's economic power, motherhood, work-life balance, female leadership, social entrepreneurship Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  45. 145

    The Recruiter Who Started a Restaurant and a Global Tech Platform to Provide Workers with Dignity

    Episode Description: Holly Diamond arrived in New York with $400 and a dream, faced the heartbreak of job searching during the 2009 recession, and eventually opened a restaurant during the pandemic to employ her parents. Now she's the CEO of Work Onward, a map-based hiring platform connecting small businesses with local workers, especially in immigrant-owned businesses and blue-collar industries.What You'll Learn:How to turn personal struggles into scalable solutionsThe power of taking action before you feel readyCreating dignity in employment for overlooked populationsBuilding technology that serves vulnerable communitiesBalancing profit with social impact in businessKey Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction and Holly's nomination[01:30] What is Work Onward and how it works[04:30] The restaurant origin story during COVID[10:45] Holly's "Just Do It" philosophy[12:30] The concept of dignity in employment[18:30] Self-care and taking care of your wellbeing[24:15] Who Holly nominates for the showKey Takeaways:Sometimes the craziest-sounding decisions are exactly what the moment requiresYour personal struggles can become your professional superpowersTechnology should make opportunities visible, not create more barriersDignity in work starts with how we see and treat each otherCommunity and collaboration are essential for creating lasting changeResource Links:Work Onward: [Platform information]Holly's Restaurant: [Location details]Connect with Holly: [Professional contact information]Guest Bio: Holly Diamond is the CEO of Work Onward, a map-based hiring platform that connects small businesses with local hourly workers. Originally from South Korea, she moved to New York in 2009 and has spent over 10 years as a recruiter specializing in blue-collar industries. In 2020, she opened a restaurant to employ her parents during the pandemic, which became the inspiration for Work Onward's mission to create more inclusive hiring practices.Host Bio: Aransas Savas is a researcher, coach, and host of The Uplifters Podcast. Connect with her:Instagram: @aransas_savasPodcast Instagram: @the_uplifters_podcastTikTok: @theuplifterspodcastWebsite: www.theuplifterspodcast.com YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@theuplifterspodcastLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aransassavas/Keywords: career transition, immigrant entrepreneurs, job search platform, social impact business, small business hiring, dignity in work, pandemic pivots, family entrepreneurship, tech for good, inclusive hiring Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  46. 144

    From Chief Product Officer to Founder: How Alex Stried Built the Parenting Support Platform Every Family Needs

    Episode DescriptionJoin host Aransas Savas as she reconnects with Alex Stried, former Chief Product Officer at Cerebral who left her executive role to co-found Poppins, a revolutionary 24/7 pediatric care and parent coaching platform. In this candid conversation, Alex shares how the Surgeon General's declaration of parent stress as a public health crisis became her wake-up call to build the company she wished existed as a working mother. From managing teams of hundreds to starting from scratch, Alex reveals the data-driven approach that helped her raise courage capital and turn overwhelming parenthood into a scalable solution.What You'll LearnHow to transition from corporate executive to entrepreneur without losing momentum in your careerParent stress management strategies that address both behavioral and medical needsFundraising tips for female founders pitching to investors who may not understand your marketWork-life balance techniques for high-achieving parents juggling career pivotsBuilding courage capital through evidence-based decision making and strategic risk-takingStartup validation methods using personal pain points to identify market opportunitiesLeadership strategies for downsizing teams and making difficult business decisions with empathyCareer change advice for professionals feeling called to solve problems they've experienced firsthandTime Stamps00:00 - Introduction and reconnecting after years at Weight Watchers03:15 - The Surgeon General's parent stress crisis declaration as a catalyst06:30 - What Poppins offers: 24/7 pediatric care and parent coaching09:45 - Making the leap from CPO to founder: financial and personal considerations14:30 - Overcoming intimidation through "listening tours" and data collection18:15 - Pitching investors who don't understand the parenting market22:45 - Building courage through preparation and power posing25:30 - Advice for managing fear of failure and career setbacks28:15 - Self-care strategies for high-achieving working parents32:45 - Guest nominations: Hillary Manger, Haley Barna, Emily Green35:00 - How listeners can support Poppins and connect with AlexKey Takeaways✅ Turn frustration into fuel: Your biggest parenting challenges might be pointing toward your next business opportunity✅ Build evidence-based courage: Create compelling data to support both investor pitches and major life decisions✅ Practice the "listening tour" approach: Gather perspectives from multiple stakeholders before making intimidating moves✅ Reframe failure as temporary: Remember that careers are resilient and setbacks are learning opportunities✅ Prepare to be spontaneous: Practice presentations until you can deliver them authentically and confidentlyResource LinksPoppins - Alex's 24/7 pediatric care and parent coaching platformAmy Cuddy's research on power posingBJ Fogg's behavior change work from StanfordGuest BioAlex Stried is the co-founder of Poppins, a comprehensive parenting platform offering 24/7 pediatric care via text and parent coaching services. Previously, she served as Chief Product Officer at Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  47. 143

    Dina Berrin Put all Her (Tarot) Cards on the Table: A Former Executive Who Traded Sales Targets for Soul Work

    This Week’s Featured Uplifter: Dina BerrinDina Berrin is a professional intuitive and coach, but her journey from corporate sales executive to master tarot reader wasn't a straight line. For years, she kept her mystical studies hidden, reading cards at parties but never discussing it at work, helping colleagues in bathroom conversations but always waving them away when her boss was around. What would her kids’ parents think? Would people dismiss her as crazy, unintelligent, unserious? When COVID forced a choice between her nine-to-five life and her calling, she decided it was time to step fully into her dreams despite those questions and fears.Her Courage Practice: The Permission to Be SeenSignature Practice: Refusing to Hide Her LightDina's most powerful practice isn't about cards or crystals—it's about the daily choice to show up authentically, even when it feels uncomfortable. After decades of compartmentalizing her gifts, she made a radical decision: no more shrinking, no more hiding, no more apologizing for who she is. "I was unwilling to be judged by people that really had no idea what they were even judging"This practice ripples outward in everything she does. Her presence gives others permission to explore their own curiosity about the mystical, the intuitive, the parts of themselves they've kept hidden. By refusing to dim her light, she illuminates paths for others to step into their own authentic power.Listen to This Episode If...You've ever felt like you need to hide parts of yourself to be "professional" or acceptable, you're tired of asking everyone else what you should do instead of trusting your own judgment, you feel stuck repeating the same patterns and want to understand how to break free, or you're curious about how ancient wisdom traditions can support modern decision-making and personal growth.Lift Her UpSupport Dina's mission to help people reconnect with their intuition by:Reading her book: The Way Within: Igniting Your Intuition with Sacred Tools Work with her: Visit her website to learn about her unique charm journal and divination tools, or work with her through coaching to help you understand your astrology and tarotIf You Liked This, Check Out These StoriesEpisode 92: Candy Motzek - Who Nominated DinaEpisode 57: Rahti Gorfien - The creative coach who helps scattered professionals follow through and finish thingsEpisode 99: Dr. Shayna Kaufmann - The psychologist who left forensic work at 50 to embrace heart-centered practiceEpisode 76: Alma Schneider - The mother who found her voice advocating for disability rightsEpisode 18: Beth Carroll - The pastor creating safe spaces for those marginalized by traditional faith communities Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  48. 142

    Why Your Team Keeps Having the Same Fight (And How to Finally Fix It)

    How to Stop Taking Everyone's Stress Personally | 5,000-Year-Old Secret to Better Relationships | Carey DavidsonEver wonder why some people drain your energy while others light you up? Or why the same communication patterns keep causing problems in your relationships, no matter how hard you try to fix them?In this episode, relationship expert Carey Davidson reveals the ancient Chinese wisdom that explains exactly why we clash with certain personality types – and how to break those frustrating cycles for good.Carey, author of The Five Archetypes and founder of Harmin Labs, has helped major organizations like Microsoft, Starbucks, and Tony Robbins solve their most persistent relationship challenges using a 5,000-year-old system that's backed by modern neuroscience.In this episode, you'll discover:• The 5 elemental personality types that determine how you handle stress• How to recognize when you're in your "distorted state" before it ruins relationships• The specific recovery strategy for your personality type (hint: what works for others might stress you out more)• Why slowing down is the secret to faster problem-solving• How to stop absorbing other people's emotional chaosKey Takeaways:  Fire elements (like Aransas!) need connection and food when stressed  Each personality type has predictable triggers and recovery methods  Judgment and criticism from others reflect THEIR stress, not your worth  Real power comes from pausing, not pushing through  You can prevent relationship spirals by catching yourself at the "distortion point"Perfect for:Leaders struggling with team dynamicsAnyone tired of the same relationship conflictsPeople who want to understand personality differencesThose interested in ancient wisdom for modern problemsAnyone who feels "too much" or "not enough" in relationshipsAbout Carey Davidson: Carey Davidson is a behavioral expert who bridges 5,000-year-old Chinese medicine wisdom with cutting-edge neuroscience. She's the author of "The Five Archetypes" and has been hired by Fortune 500 companies to solve relationship challenges that traditional approaches can't fix.Resources Mentioned:Take the free Five Archetypes AssessmentThe Five Archetypes bookCarey's work with major corporationsConnect with Carey: Instagram: @careydavidsonofficial https://www.careydavidson.com/books/Connect with Aransas:Subscribe to The Uplifters Newsletter: www.theuplifterspodcast.comFollow on Instagram: @theuplifterspodcast and @aransas_savasWebsite: theuplifterspodcast.comTimestamps: 00:00 Intro - Why relationship patterns repeat 03:30 What are the Five Archetypes? 08:00 How stress shows up in each element 16:30 The real meaning of "too much" 22:30 Fire element challenges (Aransas's results!) 30:45 How to slow down when triggered 35:15 Why criticism isn't about you 42:00 Carey's courage practice 48:30 Practical steps to break patternsLike this episode? Subscribe for more conversations with inspiring women doing big, brave things!Tags: #relationships #personality #communication #leadership #stress #neuroscience #ancientwisdom #teamwork #conflictresolution #selfawareness #emotionalintelligence #workplace #chinesemedicine #personalitytypes #boundaries Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  49. 141

    It's Time for a 1 Girl Revolution

    Hi! New here? Welcome to the Uplifters! I'm Aransas Savas. I've spent the last 20 years at the intersection of behavior change research and coaching. On The Uplifters Podcast, we share diverse stories of women who have found something beautiful on the other side of the hard stuff. Despite self-doubt and fear (and honestly, who doesn't have those?), they've done big, brave things anyway, and show us how we can too!Our next series is Late Bloomers! 🌸Do you know a woman whose late-blooming journey would inspire our community? Or maybe that someone is YOU? Hit reply or fill out this form to nominate someone for our Late Bloomers series.This Week’s Featured Uplifter: Kate MilliganKate Milligan's story begins with frustration—the kind that sits heavy in your chest when you know something needs to change, but don’t see the change happening. After seven years in Washington D.C.'s political machine, Kate found herself pitching inspiring stories about women who weren't waiting for broken systems to fix themselves—women who were becoming the solution. Story after story got rejected. So she packed up a U-Haul and drove home to Detroit. In reading about Detroit's motto, "There is always hope and it will rise from the ashes", Kate found her North Star. "That's what women are," she realized. "Women are the most resilient. They're so powerful that they can transform this world." That moment of recognition sparked 1 Girl Revolution, a multimedia platform amplifying the stories of everyday women changing the world.Her Courage Practice: Lifting Others UpThrough her background in PR and media, Kate has made it her mission to identify women with important stories, ask the right questions to help them see their own significance, and create safe spaces for their voices to emerge.She gives women permission to see themselves as worthy of attention, as leaders worth following, as revolutionaries in their own right.In the process of uplifting others, Kate discovered her own voice. What began as a way to showcase other women's courage became the foundation for her own transformation from shy, bullied kid to Emmy-nominated documentary producer and movement builder.Listen to This If You:Aren’t quite sure what your big purpose isFeel like your voice doesn't matter in a noisy worldAre tired of waiting for broken systems to change themselvesWant to turn your own pain into purpose for othersAre ready to stop playing small and start building something meaningfulReferences & Resources:1 Girl Revolution Podcast: 260+ episodes of women's stories (available on all podcast platforms and YouTube)Emmy-nominated documentaries: "The Girl Inside" and "In Tandem" (watch on YouTube)Main website: www.1girlrevolution.comNonprofit platform: www.onegirlrevolution.orgLift Her Up:Subscribe to the One Girl Revolution podcast (available on all platforms and Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

  50. 140

    From Teacher to Mindfulness Entrepreneur with Vanessa Hutchinson-Szekely

    Episode DescriptionIn this inspiring episode of The Uplifters Podcast, host Aransas Savas sits down with Vanessa Hutchinson-Szekely, a California-French educator who made a bold career pivot from 20 years in teaching to founding Big Belly Breathing, her mindfulness and meditation platform.Vanessa shares her transformative journey from San Francisco classroom teacher to entrepreneur, including a life-changing sabbatical year in the French Alps, her discovery of yoga and meditation during the pandemic, and how she built courage to leave educational stability behind. Learn about her innovative approach to family mindfulness, her bilingual meditation podcasts, and her newest venture co-hosting a WNBA podcast.Listen for: A bonus guided meditation led by Vanessa that will refresh your afternoon and energize your next brave step!Key Topics CoveredCareer transitions after 40: How to pivot from a stable 20-year career to entrepreneurshipMindfulness and meditation: Building a daily practice and teaching it to familiesEntrepreneurship journey: From idea to execution, testing and iterating productsOvercoming perfectionism: Embracing the "messy" process of building something newWork-life balance: Taking care of yourself while serving others as an "uplifter"Bilingual education: Creating resources in French and EnglishSports and community: Finding joy and building connections through women's basketballGuest BioVanessa Hutchinson-Szekely is a California-French educator, writer, and mindfulness advocate based in San Francisco. She's the founder of Big Belly Breathing, where she teaches meditation workshops and creates mindfulness resources for families, kids, and adults. She also co-hosts "Valkyries, Say Less," a podcast covering the WNBA's Golden State Valkyries. After 20 years in education, including time as a PE teacher and instructional coach, Vanessa took a brave leap to build her own platform focused on wellness and joy.Episode Highlights & Timestamps[02:00] The sabbatical year that changed everything - moving to a French Alpine village[06:30] How the pandemic shifted her perspective on education and connection[09:15] Getting yoga teacher certification while teaching PE outdoors[12:30] The meditation insight that gave her business its name[14:45] Testing her first product and learning to scale back based on feedback[21:00] The scary but exhilarating leap from stable employment to entrepreneurship[24:30] Her "throwing pasta at the wall" philosophy for overcoming perfectionism[32:45] BONUS: Guided meditation demonstration - Vanessa leads a calming body scan[38:30] Self-care strategies for busy entrepreneurs and "uplifters"Lift Her UpReady to add more mindfulness to your family's life? Big Belly Breathing offers guided meditations in both French and English, plus journals and workshops for all ages. Find the podcast on any platform, visit bigbellybreathing.com for resources, and if you're feeling generous, leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts.For WNBA fans, check out Valkyries Say Less for pure basketball joy and community celebration. And if you're in the Bay Area, maybe you'll spot Vanessa in her season ticket seats, evangelizing the power of women's... Get full access to The Uplifters at www.theuplifterspodcast.com/subscribe

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Uplifters Podcast features inspiring conversations with midlife women making big, brave moves in the second half of their lives. Each episode includes brain science and research on how to work with (not against) your midlife brain, body, and resources + tips and tools for designing your boldest second half of life! www.theuplifterspodcast.com

HOSTED BY

Aransas Savas

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does The Uplifters have?

The Uplifters currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is The Uplifters about?

The Uplifters Podcast features inspiring conversations with midlife women making big, brave moves in the second half of their lives. Each episode includes brain science and research on how to work with (not against) your midlife brain, body, and resources + tips and tools for designing your boldest...

How often does The Uplifters release new episodes?

The Uplifters has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to The Uplifters?

You can listen to The Uplifters on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts The Uplifters?

The Uplifters is created and hosted by Aransas Savas.
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