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What No One Tells You About Midlife Identity Crisis

and Why You're So Angry About It
What No One Tells You About Midlife Identity Crisis

 

“I don’t know who I am anymore.” 

It’s a sentence I hear from women over 40 every single week.

And it makes sense. If you’ve spent decades following the script (being the good girl, the selfless mother, the supportive partner, the loyal employee) it’s no wonder you’re waking up wondering: How did I end up here? Why does it feel like something’s been stolen from me? And why am I so damn angry?

 

Here’s the thing no one else tells you:

A midlife identity crisis isn’t always quiet or weepy. Sometimes it’s furious. And sometimes that anger is the most honest thing you’ve felt in years. 

Here’s the truth that made me stop in my tracks: If you haven’t felt angry, you haven’t healed. 

Read that again.

If you haven’t felt angry, you haven’t healed.

Makes you stop and think, doesn’t it? 

I’ve been arguing about how anger works with many friends, family members, and therapists. After much soul-searching, and a lot of research, thought, and conversation, this is my take on it. 

 

Anger is a tool.

And like all other tools, it can be used to help or hurt, which means anger comes with a heavy load of responsibility. We have to choose how we channel that anger, both inwards and outwards. It’s hard work, but that work can be transformative.

From one midlife woman learning to work with her anger to another, here is my best piece of advice for working with mid-life anger.

 

Listen to the Anger

Anger isn’t bad. It’s not something to shove down or “fix.” It’s a messenger. It tells you where you’ve been silenced. Where you’ve overgiven. Where you’ve twisted yourself to fit a mold that no longer fits (and maybe never did).

So don’t ignore it. Don’t numb it.


Sit with it. Write about it. Talk to it. Ask it what it’s trying to show you. Anger has edges. It cuts through the noise and helps you name what matters.

 

Learn From the Anger

Anger can be clarifying. It points to your core values, including the ones you’ve abandoned or compromised. It reveals the gap between who you are and who you were taught to be.

Ask yourself:

  • What’s underneath this anger?

  • Where have I been pretending?

  • What do I want instead?

You’re not “too emotional.” You’re finally telling yourself the truth.

 

Stop Apologizing for Being Angry

Women are constantly told to stay small, stay nice, stay quiet. We learn young to internalize the idea that anger makes us “difficult,” “ungrateful,” or “unhinged.”

Nope.

Anger isn’t a flaw. It’s fuel. It’s what gets you out of bed and out of patterns that no longer serve us.

The goal isn’t to get over your anger. It’s to understand it, use it, and channel it into action that restores your voice and honors your identity.

 

Channel It. Don’t Swallow It.

If you’re tired of bottling it up or blowing it up, you’re not alone. That’s why I created the Invisible to Unstoppable program, a space to focus on embracing your identity with meaning and the skill set to live life on your terms. 

Because you’re not crazy. You’re waking up. And you don’t have to do it alone. I’m with you every step along the way.

 

Ready to stop swallowing your anger and start using it?

Check out the Invisible to Unstoppable program and turn that midlife fire into clarity, confidence, and a kickass plan.

 

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