In this week’s episode of The Baggage Reclaim Sessions, I chat with one of my closest friends, Karen Arthur, about our 16-year friendship and her remarkable journey of reinvention after 50. From experiencing burnout as a teacher at 47 to becoming a fashion designer, Specsavers model, podcaster, author, and menopause campaigner, Karen shares how she’s discovered more freedom, purpose and authentic joy in her later years than ever before.

We discuss how societal expectations about aging limit our sense of possibility, why “age-gap friendships” isn’t a necessary term for what is simply a meaningful connection between two people, and the powerful shifts that happen when you finally prioritise yourself after decades of putting others first. If you’ve ever worried that your best years are behind you or that it’s “too late” to change direction, this conversation will remind you it’s never too late to become more of who you really are.

  • Life’s most significant transformations can happen at any age. Karen’s journey from burned-out teacher at 47 to thriving creative entrepreneur at 63 demonstrates that our best years aren’t necessarily behind us. The societal narrative that we must achieve everything by our 30s or 40s is a harmful myth that limits our potential for growth, exploration, and joy in later decades.
  • Friendship isn’t defined by age brackets. When we limit ourselves to connections with people who match our age, background, or life stage, we miss out on rich relationships that can provide different perspectives and mutual growth.
  • Mental health challenges like burnout can become powerful catalysts for change when we finally listen to what our bodies and minds have been trying to tell us. Karen’s experience of rocking in a dark room marked the beginning of her journey toward prioritising herself after decades of putting others first.
  • Our relationship with money is often shaped by childhood experiences and cultural messaging that may no longer serve us. Transforming this relationship from scarcity (“I’m terrified of being homeless”) to abundance (“I am blessed and highly favoured, and I will never fail”) can open doors to opportunities we never imagined possible.
  • Learning to mind your own business becomes an important part of growth in later years, particularly for people who’ve spent their lives as fixers and caretakers. Recognising that even adult children don’t “belong” to us and need space to make their own decisions is challenging but liberating work that creates healthier relationships for everyone involved.

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