You don’t need to torch your career to begin again. This book is a precise method for midlife reinvention—built on small bets, clear thinking, and the assets you already have. If you’ve wondered whether a second act career is possible without risking the mortgage or your reputation, this is your blueprint. It shows you how to surface transferable skills, harvest identity capital, and design low-regret experiments that reveal what works before you commit. You’ll learn to map the adjacent possible around your current role, borrow credibility instead of buying credentials, and build meaning beyond work that lasts longer than any job title. Real case studies, practical exercises, and weekly rhythms help you create momentum you can measure. Inside, you’ll learn how to: - Rebalance your portfolio life so income, energy, and time support change rather than fight it - Turn hidden strengths into proof-of-work that travels across industries - Use small pilots to test direction, price your new value, and decide when to cross over - Keep relationships strong and reputation intact while you pivot This is for thoughtful professionals who want progress without drama—people who care about craft, contribution, and a path that is sustainable. By the end, you’ll have a clear map for reinvention without quitting: a set of experiments, decisions, and conversations that make your next chapter safer, saner, and genuinely yours.
Second Life, Not Second Chance
SKU: 9789374126066
$25.99 Regular Price
$20.06Sale Price
- Jonathan Mercer writes about patience, craft, and the quiet discipline that makes progress inevitable. After years advising founders and mid-career professionals, he began documenting what actually helps people change without blowing up the lives they have built. His essays mix lived observation with ideas from philosophy and psychology—closer to Montaigne than to hustle culture—and return often to a simple principle: meaning is made in the doing. He believes reinvention should look less like a bonfire and more like a carefully tended hearth: steady heat, well-placed fuel, and room for others to gather. He lives simply, keeps a commonplace book of field notes, and works with readers who want a second life built on first principles.


















