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Why It’s Not Too Late to Live Your Own Life

By Christine Field July 17, 2026 Mindset

Somewhere around my late 50s, I noticed a pattern in nearly every woman I knew, including myself: we were remarkably good at giving other people permission to live boldly, and remarkably bad at extending that same permission to ourselves.

We’d tell our friends, “Go ahead and take that trip, you’ve earned it.” We’d tell our daughters, “Don’t let guilt keep you from the job [the move, the relationship] that’s actually right for you.” And then we’d hang up the phone and go right back to rearranging our own lives around everyone else’s schedules, needs, and unspoken expectations, as if the rule we’d just handed out so generously to someone else simply didn’t apply to us.

Is This You?

If you recognize yourself in that pattern, I want to say something directly to you: it is not too late, and it was never selfish, to live your own life.

Many of us spent decades as the emotional infrastructure of our families. We held the schedules, absorbed the crises, smoothed the conflicts, and generally made ourselves available at any hour for anyone who needed us – especially our children, even well into their own adulthood. This wasn’t a flaw in us. It was often exactly what was needed at the time, and most of us did it with real love.

But infrastructure doesn’t get to retire just because the building is finished. At some point, if nobody actively decides otherwise, you simply keep being the load-bearing wall for everyone else’s life indefinitely – available at 60, at 65, at 70, because nobody ever told you that you were allowed to stop, and because the people relying on that availability have very little incentive to suggest you should.

You Are Allowed to Stop

This is where boundaries come in, and I want to be precise about what I mean by that word, because it gets used loosely. A boundary, in the sense I mean it, is not punishment, and it’s not anger. It is simply a clear, decided line around what is yours – your time, your money, your physical energy, your peace of mind – communicated calmly and held consistently, regardless of how the other person reacts to it.

The hardest part is almost never deciding the boundary. It’s holding it once the guilt arrives, because the guilt will absolutely arrive, dressed up as love or obligation or the simple, exhausting habit of decades. Your adult child calls upset, and every cell in your body wants to drop whatever you’re doing and fix it, the way you’ve fixed things since they were small. Your old friend is hurt that you’re not as available as you used to be, and some part of you wants to apologize for having a life.

Look at It Differently

I want to offer you a small reframe that has helped me hold my own boundaries more easily: the guilt you feel when you say no is not evidence that you’re doing something wrong. It is simply the old pattern, the one that kept you available for decades, protesting its retirement. Patterns don’t go quietly. They argue. You are allowed to hear the argument and still close the door gently behind you.

What I’ve found, in this stage of life, is that the women who build the most vibrant second acts – the ones who travel, write, start businesses, fall in love again, or simply spend an unhurried Tuesday morning exactly as they please – are almost never the ones with no boundaries. They’re the ones who got specific about what belongs to them and held that line with a surprising amount of grace, even when it disappointed people who preferred the old arrangement.

I also want to gently name something that doesn’t get said enough in conversations about boundaries and aging: holding a boundary often gets easier with practice, not harder. The first time you decline to drop everything for a non-emergency, it can feel almost unbearable. The tenth time, it feels like Tuesday. Your nervous system learns, slowly, that the relationship survives your no – that the people who truly love you adjust, and the ones who only valued your availability reveal themselves, which is its own kind of useful information.

So here is my real question for you this week, the one I’d ask if we were sitting across the table from each other with coffee: if you stopped waiting for permission, and simply decided, today, that it’s time to live your own life – what would you actually build inside that boundary? Not someone else’s idea of what your second act should look like. Yours.

It is not too late. It was never selfish. And the fence you build now is not the end of love for the people in your life. It’s the beginning of finally having a self left over to love them from.

Let’s Discuss:

If you fully believed it wasn’t too late, what would your version of ‘living your own life’ actually include?

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The Author

Christine Moriarty Field is an author, attorney, and speaker. After homeschooling her four children, life fell apart. Divorced after 33 years, she dealt with unimaginable challenges with her adult children, including drug addiction, estrangement, and mental health issues. Therapy, prayer and introspection led her to encourage moms facing similar challenges. She is a criminal defense attorney and a recently remarried pastor’s wife. Learn more HERE.

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