Anonymous wrote:I switched from being a lawyer to becoming a doula at 32. At 37, I had finished school and become a midwife. Not exactly my 40s, but a big pivot. Financially, it was really hard for our family during the years of being in school, but I stuck with it and I do well financially now, with the added benefit of loving my job and making a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My aunt switched from computer programming to Counseling in her 40s. She loves it.
do you know what she did (courses, training) to switch to counseling? I am interested and curious how long it takes to switch. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started my own business at age 50. Probably should have stayed at my day job, though. It was easier and paid more.
considering doing this, can ou share more about your experience?
Sure. It took 3 years of many 16 hour days to make a profit, and a small one at that. I'm exhausted and burned out, and being my own boss is not even a tiny bit fun anymore. Getting noticed and getting business and ranking on Google was the easy part. My product is great and sells itself, and I'm at good at selling anyway, and marketing, and pretty much anything creative. The hard part is the finance and organization part. I just really have no idea what I'm doing and can't figure out how people make a living doing this (but they do). I have a whole bunch of degrees and credentials and thought I'd be able to learn it because I'm so smart and all, but I'm failing and maybe not that smart and now wish I'd just gotten a regular job with actual benefits and guaranteed pay. Unless you are in an industry with really high profit margins and have a ton of money and business experience, I can't really recommend this route.
Anonymous wrote:My aunt switched from computer programming to Counseling in her 40s. She loves it.