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Active Pause

Creative Explorations of Mindfulness, Meaning & Purpose

Midlife Career Change

2 min readSep 13, 2025

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You probably know people like Jim. He keeps saying how much he hates his job: not just his boss or the company he works for… the whole business he’s in. Then, one day, he loses his job. And what is he doing now? He’s complaining about the loss of income, the loss of stability. And he’s frantically trying to find a job in the very same industry.

Jim’s perspective changed. When he lost his job, he lost his sense of safety. His priority was no longer to find more fulfillment in life, it was to survive.

When we feel threatened, most of us want to run for the safety of what we know. Jim’s talents and experience are more likely to be fully appreciated in the same line of business. The practical benefit is that his job search should be shorter and his salary higher than if he were to go into an altogether different field.

Now, let’s assume that Jim is encountering difficulties finding the same job he just lost. This solution is no longer the easy way out. In fact, this solution may not even be possible. Now, more fear sets in.

Fear

Fear pushes Jim to stretch his comfort zone. He must seek other possibilities. He does it with a knot in his stomach: this is no longer the angry Jim who despised the business he was in. This man felt rejected, first by his employer, then by a whole business category. Will others now reject him as well? Jim is afraid they will: after all, he’s even more of a stranger to these new businesses than he was to the familiar companies he initially approached.

Jim’s story ends well. In this case, adversity has been a blessing in disguise: it allowed Jim to explore other careers. Let’s say he finds one that brings him more satisfaction, more money, or both!

What is the moral of the story?

One possible conclusion is to wait to be fired, trusting that Providence will lead to you to bigger and better things.

Another one is to nod your head wisely while muttering: “The grass is always greener elsewhere”. Don’t even dream of changing the status quo.

Of course, there’s also another possible conclusion. It might make sense to find motivation from something else than fear. Why not take advantage of feeling safe to explore what you really want out of life?

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Active Pause
Active Pause

Published in Active Pause

Creative Explorations of Mindfulness, Meaning & Purpose

Serge Prengel
Serge Prengel

Written by Serge Prengel

Serge Prengel is a therapist. He is the author of Bedtime Stories For Your Inner Child and other books. See: https://proactivemindfulness.com/books

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