Somewhere along the way, you learned which parts of yourself were acceptable — and which were not.
Maybe you learned that your anger made people uncomfortable. That your ambition was “too much.” That your grief needed to be tidied up quickly. That your desires — for more, for different, for something you couldn’t even name — were selfish.
So you did what most of us do. You tucked those parts away. You exiled them to the basement of your psyche and got on with the business of being a good daughter, a good wife, a good mother, a good professional.
And it worked. For a while.
Carl Jung called this collection of exiled parts the shadow — everything about ourselves that we’ve pushed out of awareness because it felt unacceptable, unlovable, or dangerous.
The shadow isn’t evil. It isn’t your “dark side” in the way movies portray it. It’s simply the parts of you that didn’t fit the life you were trying to live.
Your shadow might hold your rage. But it might also hold your creativity, your sexuality, your hunger for recognition, your need for solitude. It holds whatever you decided — consciously or not — couldn’t come with you into your public life.
The problem is, the shadow doesn’t disappear just because we stop looking at it.
For the first half of life, most of us can keep the shadow at bay. We’re too busy building careers, raising children, managing households, meeting expectations. We don’t have time to wonder about the parts of ourselves we’ve abandoned.
But midlife has a way of cracking things open.
The roles that kept us busy start to shift. The children leave. The career plateaus or loses its meaning. The body changes in ways we can’t control. And in that space — that uncomfortable, liminal space — the shadow starts to stir.
You might notice it as:
These aren’t signs that something is wrong with you. They’re signs that your shadow is asking to be met.
Jung believed that the central task of the second half of life is individuation — becoming whole by integrating the parts of ourselves we’ve denied or disowned.
This is shadow work. And it’s not about wallowing in darkness or dredging up trauma for its own sake. It’s about reclaiming your full self.
It’s about asking:
What parts of me did I exile to be acceptable?
What was I told not to be — and what if I could be that now?
What have I been so afraid of that I’ve kept it locked away?
The paradox is this: the shadow only has power over us when it stays unconscious. When we bring it into the light — when we acknowledge it, befriend it, integrate it — it stops running the show.
And something remarkable happens. We become more whole. More free. More fully ourselves.
Shadow work isn’t one dramatic confrontation. It’s a gradual process of noticing, inquiring, and welcoming.
It might look like:
Here’s what I’ve learned, both in my own life and in my work with women:
The shadow isn’t your enemy. It’s your lost self, waiting to be welcomed home.
The parts you exiled didn’t go away. They’ve been waiting — patiently, sometimes not so patiently — for you to be ready to meet them.
And midlife, with all its disruption and discomfort, is often when we’re finally ready.
Not because everything is falling apart. But because we’ve finally lived enough to know: we cannot become whole by leaving parts of ourselves behind.
The woman you’re becoming needs all of you. Even — especially — the parts you were told to hide.
Terri Altschul is a depth coach working with women in the second half of life. Shadow work is one of the six terrains explored in The Second Half of Life Circle. Learn more at terri.coach.
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.