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What to Do When You Know You Want Change — But Don’t Know What Comes Next

 

There’s a moment many midlife professionals reach, often quietly, when they realize something important:

They don’t want this anymore.

But they also don’t know what that is yet.

And that in-between space can feel very uncomfortable.

You may have entered the new year hoping clarity would magically arrive with a fresh calendar. Instead, you’re left with a familiar tension:

  • You know your current work no longer fits
  • You feel restless, disengaged, or drained
  • But you can’t clearly see what your next chapter looks like

If this sounds familiar, let me reassure you of something important:

This stage is not a failure. It’s a transition.

And it’s one of the most common, and necessary, stages of meaningful midlife change.

Why This Phase Feels So Hard

Most of us were taught that before we make a change, we should have answers.
A plan.
Certainty.

But real-life transitions don’t work that way.

Clarity rarely arrives before movement.
It shows up through reflection, exploration, and small, intentional steps.

When you pressure yourself to “figure it all out” too quickly, you end up stuck, not because you’re incapable, but because you’re asking yourself the wrong thing.

The question isn’t:
“What should I do next with my life?”

A better question is:
“What feels misaligned right now, and what do I need more of?”

What Not To Do When You Feel This Way

When uncertainty shows up, it’s tempting to:

  • Panic and make a rushed decision
  • Force yourself into a new direction that doesn’t truly fit
  • Stay frozen because you don’t trust yourself to choose correctly

None of these lead to clarity.
They only create more doubt.

Midlife change works best when it’s grounded, not reactive.

What Actually Helps When You Don’t Know What’s Next

Instead of demanding answers, focus on awareness.

Start by noticing:

  • What consistently drains your energy
  • What no longer aligns with your values or health
  • What you’re no longer willing to tolerate

Just as important, pay attention to subtle signals:

  • Topics you keep thinking about
  • Conversations that spark curiosity
  • Ideas that return, even when you push them away

These aren’t random thoughts.
They’re information.

You Don’t Need the Whole Map — Just the Next Step

One of the biggest myths about midlife change is that you need a full plan before you begin.

You don’t.

You only need:

  • A willingness to be honest
  • Permission to explore without committing
  • A calm way to sort through what fits and what doesn’t

This is why guided reflection is so powerful.

Clarity isn’t about choosing quickly.
It’s about choosing well.

A Gentle Next Step

If you’re in this in-between space, you don’t need to leap.
You just need a starting point.

That’s why I created the Midlife Career Clarity Starter Kit — to help you slow things down, ask the right questions, and begin understanding what direction truly fits your life now.

👉 Download the free Starter Kit here

And if you’d prefer personal support, a 60-minute Midlife Career Clarity Session can help you:

  • untangle your thoughts
  • identify realistic options
  • walk away with a grounded next step

Not knowing what comes next doesn’t mean you’re lost.
It means you’re listening.

And that’s where real change begins.

**I invite you to comment and share how this post has helped you, and any feedback or experience you feel comfortable sharing. I look forward to reading your thoughts and experiences!!

Talk soon,

Denny

(Any product purchased through a hyperlink on my website may be an affiliate link, potentially resulting in a small commission for me. Please note that these commissions are not an additional cost to you. I only share products and services I have used and trust.)

This Post Has 5 Comments

  1. Ernie

    Hi Denny – This really spoke to me. I think a lot of midlife professionals quietly reach this moment where they feel misaligned, but they also feel stuck because they think they need certainty before they move. I love how you explained that clarity often comes after movement, not before it. The questions you suggested around energy, values, and what we are no longer willing to tolerate were especially helpful and realistic. Thank you for putting words to what so many people feel and for offering a gentle next step that does not require a leap.

  2. Kate Loving Shenk

    This morning I was thinking of the word “Clarity” as my go-to word of the year. Clarity entails awareness and honesty, pausing and reflecting. It can become a daily practice as we move forward in the New Year!

  3. Meredith

    Hey Denny!

    I feel like I’m standing right at the edge of this same space, knowing something needs to change, but not fully seeing what’s next yet. I need to find a job and have been out of work for the last 6 years. I don’t even know where to start. It is very scary, but it helps so much to hear that it’s not wrong to feel that way, and it’s just part of the process. I loved how you said that I don’t need the whole plan, I just need the next honest step. Thank you for putting words to something I’m quietly getting ready to walk through myself. This came a the perfect time for me!

  4. Marc

    Hi Denny,
    Should have had this 5 years ago when I retired from the Army! Then again, Covid had sprung its ugly head and the resources I looked to didn’t really know how to get us through that…

    That being said, really appreciate your information – something anyone looking to go from a 9 to 5 job to being self-employed could definitely use.

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