What’s New in the Cross Reference Library? A Halftime Institute Resource

Women at Halftime - If the role that was most significant in your first half of life no longer fits, or even exists, chances are you’re in halftime—a disorienting midlife transition no one prepared you for. Perhaps the children you raised have left the nest or soon will. The career or volunteer work that once gave you fulfillment no longer brings you joy. A foundational relationship that provided your sense of identity ended in divorce, death, or relational breakdown. Or it may be that you simply have a gnawing sense that something is missing in your life. Whatever the road that led you here, you’re feeling stuck. The daunting question is, “What now?” Carolyn Castleberry Hux, a coach with the Halftime Institute, and Shayne Moore, a former Halftime client, know from experience what it means to navigate this territory and how difficult it can be. In Women at Halftime, Shayne and Carolyn take you through a proven process for getting unstuck. Throughout this journey you will learn how to:

  • Excavate your past, pay attention to your present, and begin imagining your future

  • Let go of whatever keeps you from fulfilling the dreams you have for your life or from dreaming at all

  • Identify what God has uniquely prepared you for and what he is calling you to do

  • Persevere through setbacks and confusion as you pursue a second half of joy and purpose

It’s time to start dreaming again. You really can find joy and purpose for your next season. 

A Sneak Peak at Women @ Halftime - When you were just a little girl, some caring people may have asked, “Who do you want to be when you grow up? What do you dream about doing with your life?” And chances are, you had no shortage of answers. I want to be a teacher. I want to fly to the moon. I want to work with horses. I want to be president. I want to live in a castle. I want to be a doctor. I want to have lots of kids and live in the country. Dreaming was as natural to you as breathing. And yet, if another caring person were to ask you those questions today, the answers probably wouldn’t come so easily…Why is that? What happened between childhood and today? What happened to your dreams? Why is your dreamer turned off? It may be that you actually accomplished the dreams you had early in life. Perhaps you founded and ran a successful organization, had a fulfilling career, or raised children and are proud of the people they have become. Your dreamer is turned off because you feel you have nothing left to dream…Whatever the reasons may be, the dreams that came so easily to most of us in the first half of life now elude us. And yet, if we want to live a life of joy and purpose in our second half, we have to turn our dreamer back on.