It’s Not Too Late. It’s Just Not Guaranteed.
- CoachErinTreacy
- 3 hours ago
- 3 min read
If You’re Wondering Whether You Missed Your Window

Have you ever caught yourself thinking:
Maybe I missed my window.
Maybe I should have tried sooner.
Maybe I am too far behind.
Maybe it is safer to stay where I am.
Those thoughts are not rare. Right now people are searching:
Is it too late to change careers at 40?
How do I rebuild confidence after failure?
How do I start over after a setback?
What if I try and it does not work?
Most hesitation does not come from lack of ability. It comes from wanting certainty. We want a guarantee before we risk effort. We want applause before we endure the climb.
There are no guarantees.
Let me show you why that truth can actually set you free.
Two Women. One Mountain. Two Different Outcomes.
At the 2026 Winter Olympics, two American women stood at the top of the same downhill course.
You do not need to understand skiing to understand what this represents. Imagine standing at the edge of something you have worked toward for years. The pressure is real. The risk is visible. The outcome is uncertain.
One of those women was Lindsey Vonn.
She retired in 2019 after years of brutal injuries and surgeries. Most people assumed her career had run its course. She had already won Olympic medals. She had nothing left to prove publicly.
Then medical advances gave her another opportunity. At 40, she returned to World Cup racing. At 41, she became the oldest woman ever to win a World Cup downhill race. She qualified again for the Olympics, earning her place among just 36 women worldwide who made the field.
That is not nostalgia. That is earned relevance.
The other woman was Breezy Johnson.
Her path was quieter. Injuries stalled her momentum. She missed a previous Olympic Games. For years she worked outside the spotlight. Inside the sport, people knew her talent. Outside of it, she was often overlooked.
She kept training.
In 2025 she won the World Championship downhill title. In 2026 she stood on the Olympic podium with gold.
Two women. Same mountain. Same dream.
Very different outcomes.
During the Olympic race, Vonn crashed early in her run and left the mountain by helicopter with a broken leg. Johnson left with gold around her neck.
One result looks triumphant. The other looks devastating.
If you only measure success by the medal, the story feels obvious. If you look deeper, it becomes useful.
Nobody Can Guarantee the Outcome
Nobody can guarantee a podium.
Nobody can guarantee success.
Nobody can guarantee applause.
You can prepare for years and still experience a setback in seconds.
You can grind quietly for years and finally have everything align.
Both of those realities are true.
What separates people who move forward from people who stall is not certainty. It is definition.
Vonn defined success before the race began. She wanted to know if she could compete at the highest level again. She trained. She proved she could. She won again at 41. She earned her place back among the best in the world.
Johnson defined success as staying disciplined long enough for opportunity to meet preparation. She kept building when attention was thin.
Different timelines. Different personalities. Same decision.
To enter the gate.
What This Means for Your Career, Your Goals, Your Next Step
This is where your life mirrors theirs.
You may not be chasing Olympic gold. You might be considering a career pivot. Launching a business.
Going after a role that stretches you. Trying again after something public did not work.
You are not afraid of work. You are afraid of the possibility that the work will not guarantee the outcome. It is the fear that keeps talented people parked.
Most people hesitate because they want certainty. They want proof the effort will end in visible success. They want applause waiting at the bottom.
Life does not work like that.
You do not control outcomes.
You control preparation.
You control courage.
You control whether fear keeps you in the lodge or discipline moves you to the start line.
When you look at those two women, do not reduce the story to medal versus injury. Learn from them.
See discipline versus fear.
See preparation versus paralysis.
See two different outcomes built on the same decision.
To race.
If there are no guarantees anyway, what would you attempt?
If you are in a season where you are redefining success or considering a bold professional move, this conversation continues inside Career & Business Coaching.
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