Two women who quit their corporate jobs have started a podcast to inspire others who are facing a “career crossroads” in their 40s and 50s.
Susannah de Jager and Patsy Day, both from Oxford, walked away from their jobs in finance and law shortly after the coronavirus pandemic.
During that time, the pair said they found themselves “on a quest to find the path through the wobbly middle” of their careers.
They said they launched their podcast, called The Wobbly Middle, to help other women facing career uncertainty in their middle age.
Ms de Jager, 38, had been working in finance for 15 years and said that, while she enjoyed it, the demands of family life and the stress of the job had “collided”.
“You don’t want to go back to a high-pressure job but you want to do something,” she said. “You don’t just want to sit at home and do nothing when the kids are at school.”
Similarly, Ms Day, 46, said she had been working in her dream job as a lawyer but found it had become draining.
“I took some time off and loved it. I knew what I didn’t want to go back to but I didn’t know how to move forward,” she said.
The two friends said more and more middle-aged women were quitting their jobs because of family, perimenopause and because they were “tired of the way the corporate world still looks”.
Each episode of their podcast, which launched on Thursday, will feature conversations with other women who have made bold career pivots.
“We really wanted to tackle confidence issues and I think feelings of uncertainty are totally normal,” Ms Day said.
“What’s amazing is that everybody has these feelings, everybody has these low ebbs of confidence and what we’re trying to do is be a companion to people in that moment,” Ms de Jager added.
Their guests include a midwife-turned-femtech innovator and a journalist who switched to a job in recruiting.
Ms de Jager said: “We’re just thrilled to get it out there and we hope it resonates with other women like us.”
đ| ILKLEY CHAT JOBS BOARD |đ 24.12.24 every Tuesday with Right at Home Ilkley, Keighley & Skipton - recruiting CareGivers to provide quality care in
The Office for National Statistics (ONS), with its number-crunchers and crack-of-dawn data dumps, is an unlikely backdrop for turmoil.But in recent months the N
Labour has been warned that the UK is on the brink of a recession and the economy is fast heading for âthe worst of all worlds.â According to the Office
By Chandini Monnappa and Lawrence White LONDON (Reuters) -British insurer Aviva could cut up to 2,300 jobs as it takes over smaller rival Direct Line in a 3