I talk to a lot of women who know their home isn't working for them anymore. They've known it for a while, actually.
But they haven't done anything about it. Not because they don't want to. Because they feel guilty for wanting to.
Guilty that wanting something different feels like saying the home they built their family in wasn't enough. Guilty that their kids might feel like they're erasing something. Guilty that their partner thinks the timing is off. Guilty that they even have the option to consider moving when so many people don't.
And underneath all of that, sometimes there's a quieter guilt: that wanting a home that works better for them specifically… not for the kids, not for the history of the house, but for them… feels somehow selfish.
It isn't. But I understand why it feels that way.
Women in midlife have spent decades making home decisions based on what everyone else needs. The school catchment. The proximity to work. The extra bedroom for whoever was about to arrive. And somewhere along the way, the question of what the home needs to look like for you… just you… never quite made it to the top of the list.
In South Surrey and Langley I see this all the time. Women who are ready for something different but who keep waiting for everyone else to be ready too. Or waiting for the guilt to lift on its own.
Here's what I've learned from nearly 20 years of doing this: the guilt doesn't usually lift on its own. What helps is naming it out loud and then looking honestly at whether the reasons behind it are actually yours… or whether you've been holding someone else's discomfort for them.
Wanting a home that supports the next chapter of your life is not selfish. It's honest. And honest is usually where the right decision starts.