His and Her So-called Mid-Life Crisis Thomson GA

She's approaching fifty, her children grown and on their own. Perhaps she's a grandmother, maybe not. Could have been she juggled career and 'happy homemaker' all at the same time. Or, maybe staying home to raise her children and make a safe nest for her husband was all she’d ever dreamed of. Either way, her mothering instincts have been pretty well satisfied.

Ms. Amy Morris
404-633-0071
1780-B Century Boulevard, NE
Atlanta, GA
Ms. Laura Imperial
Laura E. Imperial, LPC, LMFT

678-230-8516
900 Old Roswell Lakes Parkway Suite 110
Roswell, GA
Mrs. Paula Bryman
Atlanta Center For Psychotherapy, Inc

404-255-7929
300 W. Wieuca Road blg.2, ste 200
Atlanta, GA
Ms. Merrilee Stewart
Merrilee L. Stewart, LCSW

770-432-0660
1260 Concord Road, SE Suite 101
Smyrna, GA
Mrs. Shelia Head
404-271-8443
4183 Campbellton Road
Atlanta, GA
Ms. Helise Ronen
Behavioral Health Treatment Solutions

678-234-6089
7000 Peachtree Dunwoody Road Bldg 6 - Suite 302
Atlanta, GA
Ms. Robin Reeves-Oppenheim
Out-of-the Box Solutions Inc.

678-445-4184
242 Creekstone Ridge
Woodstock, GA
Ms. Susan Tomichek
Susan Tomichek, MS,LPC

678-327-5483
1014 Canton Street
Roswell, GA
Mr. Ken Cook
Kenneth B. Cook, ACSW, LCSW

770-436-1879
1260 Concord Rd. Suite 202
Smyrna, GA
Dr. Lynn Ranew
Atlanta Therapy Associates

404-233-9885
3580 Piedmont Rd. NE Suite 210
Atlanta, GA
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His and Her So-called Mid-Life Crisis

written by Judith Sherven, PhD and Jim Sniechowski, PhD |  

She’s approaching fifty, her children grown and on their own. Perhaps she’s a grandmother, maybe not. Could have been she juggled career and “happy homemaker” all at the same time. Or, maybe staying home to raise her children and make a safe nest for her husband was all she’d ever dreamed of. Either way, her mothering instincts have been pretty well satisfied.

Now, at fifty, what will she do?

At the same time, her husband, who’s been out in the workforce since he was a kid delivering newspapers, has climbed his way up the slippery career treadmill for more years than he can remember. Sure he came home to hot meals and clean sheets, children who loved him and a devoted wife who never looked at another man. But now, now at this time in his life when he’s at the top of his game, he discovers there’s really no more “up” to climb.

What will he do now?

While the “Mid-Life Crisis,” when it’s understood with compassion and respect, can be a riveting freedom factory for both women and men, all too often the questions “Is this all there is?” and “Has my life been worthy of me?” prompt the graying boomer crowd to rush into confusion and chaos without thinking much about the huge opportunities available to them.

Rather than listening intently for the next drum beat of their life’s calling, perhaps it’s even a Soul Calling , reasonably satisfying marriages are replaced by the dream of “Don Juan” or “Cinderella.” Successfully stable businesses are replaced by retirement to an island get-away and eventual boredom and depression. Face lifts and golf lessons seem to hold the key to happiness . . . until afterwards . . . leaving the Mid-Lifer feeling lost and alone, with no idea what’s driving them to make these radical if fruitless changes.

For women, the force driving them to reinvent themselves is laced with biological fuel as well as emotional need. During their young adult years, women’s estrogen-laden biology makes them well suited for having children. Couple that with the still prevalent undercurrent of social programming, no matter the women’s movement, that “Women’s place is in the home.” and “You’ll never really be fulfilled unless you’re a mother,” and it’s no surprise that the large majority of boomer women chose family as their first priority over success in the world.

But then comes menopause. And what happens to all that estrogen? It starts to decrease. But that’s not all that happens. As estrogen decreases a woman’s testosterone level, by comparison, now increases. All at the same time that her maternal duties have run their course.

So, what’s a healthy, red-blooded woman to do? If she’s conscious and mature, she’s ready to blossom and bloom in all her magnificence. So she may start her own business, go back to school, follow her dream of exotic travel, or even rethink her marriage.

Why? Because she’s free to do so. No longer responsible for raising or suppor...

Click here to read the rest of the article from Boomer-Living.com

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