✨ I Stopped Running on Empty: My Wellness Story
I didn’t set out to write about women’s wellness after 40. Honestly, I didn’t think I needed to.
For most of my life, my body and I had a pretty easy relationship. I was always small-framed, always athletic. I played sports as a kid, stayed active through high school, and went through four pregnancies looking like I’d swallowed a basketball — and bounced right back each time. Weight was never part of my story.
And then quietly, gradually, it was.
I didn’t notice it happening at first. Life was full — kids, career, the constant motion of keeping everything running. I was functioning. I just wasn’t paying attention to how I actually felt. By the time I looked up, I barely recognized myself in the mirror.
This is the story of how I changed that.
How I Got Here — The Part I Don’t Sugarcoat
COVID hit, the gym closed, and like most people, I gained weight. But what surprised me wasn’t the weight itself — it was how stubbornly it stayed once I tried to lose it. I was fifty, and my body had quietly rewritten the rules without telling me.
By the time I got serious about it, I was carrying an extra forty-five pounds. For someone who had been naturally slim her entire life, that number on the scale felt foreign. Wrong. Like I was living in someone else’s body.
The wake-up call came on a trip to Tennessee last March.
I was on vacation with my family, relaxed and happy, and when I saw the photos afterward I just stopped. I looked at them for a long time. That’s not how I see myself. That’s not who I am. It was one of those moments that’s quiet on the outside and loud on the inside.
I came home and decided something had to change.
Then fall arrived, and my relationship went through a rough patch — the kind that shakes you and makes you look hard at your life and what you want from it. I won’t go into details, but I will say this: sometimes the thing that hurts you is also the thing that lights a fire under you. I decided I was done waiting to feel good. I was going to feel great.
What Women’s Wellness After 40 Actually Looks Like
I want to be honest about what changed — because it wasn’t a program or a plan. It was a series of quiet decisions.
I changed the way I eat. Not a fad diet, not a monthly subscription box with a celebrity name on it. I just got deliberate and honest about what I was putting in my body every day.
I stopped drinking alcohol. I know that lands differently for different people. For me it wasn’t dramatic — it was just a decision I made and kept making. And the weight started moving.
Forty-five pounds. Gone in 6 months.

I was down to 111 pounds and for the first time in years I felt like myself again. But here’s what I didn’t expect — once I had that momentum, I didn’t want to stop. I started paying attention to my skin. My hair. I started buying clothes that actually fit and flattered me instead of just covering me up. Little by little I started making choices that said: I matter. How I feel matters.
Some people call that self-care. I call it finally being selfish in the right direction.
Why I’m Writing About This Here
For a long time I put everyone else first. Kids, career, the house, the schedule — the endless list of things that needed doing before I could get to me. If you’ve done that for twenty-plus years, you know exactly what I mean. There’s a version of yourself that gets quietly set aside.
I also lost my job over the last several months. And while that’s been its own kind of hard, it gave me something I hadn’t had in years: time. Time to think about what I actually want. Time to stop living to work and start asking better questions.
One of those questions was: when did I stop taking care of myself, and why did I let that go on so long?
This pillar is my answer to that question — out loud, in public, where maybe it helps someone else ask the same thing.
What You’ll Find in This Corner of Sage and Seasons
The wellness posts you’ll find here are honest and personal. I’m not a nutritionist or a trainer or a doctor. I’m a woman in her fifties who figured some things out the hard way and wants to share what actually worked.
You’ll find:
- Product reviews — skincare, haircare, supplements, fitness gear. Real opinions from someone who paid for it herself.
- Food and how it connects to how you feel — nothing restrictive, nothing preachy.
- Movement for real life — I’m not training for a marathon. I just want to feel strong.
- The mental side — because feeling good in your body starts in your head.
The kitchen garden weaves in here too. There’s something about getting your hands in the soil, stepping outside first thing in the morning, watching something you planted actually grow — it does something for your nervous system that’s hard to explain but easy to feel.
| ✨ Sage Note: I still have the photos from that Tennessee trip. I don’t look at them to be hard on myself. I look at them sometimes to remember what it felt like to make a decision and actually follow through on it. If you’re sitting somewhere right now thinking “I need to do something” — that thought is the beginning. You don’t need a plan yet. You just need to decide. |
If any part of this sounds familiar — the weight that crept up, the years of putting everyone else first, the slow process of deciding you’re worth the effort — you’re in exactly the right place.
This isn’t about being perfect. It’s about paying attention.
Pull up a chair. I’ll share with you what I am using if you want to explore for yourself. I’m glad you’re here.
