There’s a phrase I return to often in my work with women in midlife: building the bridge as you walk on it.
It comes from a poem by David Whyte, and the first time I heard it, something in me exhaled. Finally — language for what so many of us are living.
Because here’s the truth about the second half of life: there is no map. The bridges that carried us through our twenties and thirties and forties — the roles, the timelines, the clear markers of success — those bridges end. And we find ourselves standing at the edge of something, knowing we need to move forward, but unable to see the path.
This is the liminal space. The threshold. The place where what was is gone, and what will be hasn’t yet arrived.
And it’s disorienting as hell.
Most of us were raised to believe that life would make sense. That if we worked hard, made good choices, and followed the rules, we’d arrive somewhere solid. Somewhere we could stand and say: I made it. I know who I am. I know what comes next.
But the second half of life doesn’t work that way.
Instead, we find ourselves asking questions we thought we’d answered decades ago: Who am I now? What do I want? What’s still possible? We feel the ground shifting beneath roles we thought were permanent — mother, wife, professional, caretaker. We sense something ending, and something else trying to begin, but we can’t see what it is yet.
This is not a failure of planning. This is the natural architecture of a life.
Here’s what I want you to consider: What if this not-knowing isn’t a problem to be solved?
What if the liminal space — that uncomfortable, uncertain, groundless place — is exactly where you’re supposed to be?
Jung understood this. He wrote about the necessity of disorientation in the individuation process — the way we must lose our footing in order to find new ground. He knew that the second half of life asks us to release the ego’s grip, to stop building our identity on external structures, and to turn inward toward something deeper.
Building the bridge as you walk on it isn’t a failure to plan. It’s a willingness to trust what you can’t yet see.
It looks like taking one step — just one — without knowing where the path leads.
It looks like tolerating the discomfort of ambiguity instead of rushing to fill it with the next role, the next project, the next distraction.
It looks like listening. To your body. To your dreams. To the quiet knowing that rises when you finally stop moving long enough to hear it.
It looks like grief, sometimes. Because building a new bridge means acknowledging that the old one is gone.
And it looks like creativity — not in the sense of making art (though it can include that), but in the deeper sense of bringing something into being that didn’t exist before. A new way of living. A new sense of self. A new answer to the question: Who am I becoming?
The bridges of the first half of life were often built for us — by family, culture, expectation. We walked paths that others had paved, and there’s nothing wrong with that. It’s how we learned. It’s how we survived.
But the bridges of the second half of life? Those we must build ourselves.
And we build them not by having all the answers, but by being willing to move forward anyway. One board at a time. One question at a time. One small act of trust at a time.
This is the sacred work of midlife. Not fixing what’s broken. Not returning to who we were. But creating — step by step, in the dark, with materials we discover along the way — the bridge to who we’re still becoming.
If you’re in a liminal space right now — if you’re standing at the edge of something you can’t yet name — I want to leave you with this:
What if you don’t need to see the whole bridge before you take the first step?
What if the bridge only appears as you walk?
You are not lost. You are in transition. And that’s a very different thing.
Terri Altschul is a depth coach working with women in the second half of life. If you’re navigating a threshold and want a companion for the journey, learn more at terri.coach.
I guide women through the second half of life — not with strategies and quick fixes, but with depth, presence, and Jungian wisdom.
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Terri Altschul is an ICF PCC—a Professional Certified Coach with more than 30 years of experience and thousands of coaching hours. She works exclusively with women in the second half of life, drawing on Jungian depth psychology to guide women across the threshold into wholeness. Her gift is holding space for what’s emerging—and helping you become who you haven’t yet been.