TOO LATE? MY ASS.
The room for people too experienced to start over — and too sharp to disappear. Here's why it exists, and who's behind it.
YOU'RE NOT TOO LATE.
YOU'RE MISLABELLED.
Somewhere around 50, the world starts talking about you in the past tense. Too experienced. Overqualified. A little set in your ways. Maybe time to think about slowing down.
Here's the problem with that. You're not slowing down. You're sitting on thirty years of knowing exactly how things actually work — and somebody just stuck a label on you that says expired.
Too Late, My Ass started as a refusal. A refusal to treat experience like a liability instead of the entire point. We don't do "reinvention" here, because you don't need to become a different person. You need translation — taking everything you already are and aiming it at the thing you do next.
Done starting over. Not done building. That's the whole idea.
- Nothing you survive is wasted.
- Experience isn't baggage. It's leverage.
- You don't need a fresh start. You need a sharper aim.
- A second act with teeth beats a quiet exit every time.
- You're not too late. You're exactly on time.
BUILT FOR THE STILL-HUNGRY.
This is for accomplished people over 50 who are nowhere near finished. You've done the big jobs. You've got the scars and the receipts. What you've run clean out of is patience for being treated like you're on your way out the door.
You're not lost. You're not starting from zero. You're just in the wrong room — one that keeps asking you to apologize for your age instead of putting it to work.
If that's you, you're home.
ONE ROOM.
A WHOLE WORLD.
It started as a podcast and a refusal. It grew into a private network — The Rebellion Room — where experienced people stop performing "fine" and start building out loud, together.
There's a free workshop every month (First Wednesday Live), a free quiz to find your direction (The Compass), and a members' world of sprints, live polish sessions, and people who actually get it.
You don't have to figure out where to start. That's exactly what The Compass is for.
TWO OF US. ONE MISSION.
Twenty-five years in global corporate brand building. Then she pulled the cord on the corporate ladder and built the room she wished she'd had — for everyone the world tried to retire too early. Fay is the voice, the story, and the truth bombs.
Read Fay's story →The operational force behind TLMA. Stacy builds the systems that make the reinvention actually work — and keeps the whole room running so everyone else can build. If Fay lights the match, Stacy builds the engine.
Read Stacy's story →COME FIND YOUR PEOPLE.
Start with The Compass. Eight questions, free — the beginning of the most interesting chapter you've got.