In a previous blog post, I interviewed Ed Kushins, a serial entrepreneur, founder of the number one home swap company, and someone I consider both a mentor and a friend. As he shared his journey—rich with bold moves, failures, reinventions, and long-term thinking—I became especially curious about the philosophy behind his decisions.
What struck me most was not the scale of his achievements, but the clarity of his long-term priorities. What follows are five guiding principles he lives by. They offer a powerful framework for anyone reflecting on their second act.
1. Make Happiness a Deliberate Priority
One of life’s greatest privileges is the ability to nurture meaningful relationships. Making your partner, family, and close circle a priority is not sentimental—it is strategic. A fulfilling second act rests on emotional stability and shared joy. Taking the time to show appreciation, support, and gratitude builds the foundation for everything else.
2. Invest in Your Health
Health is not a side project; it is the platform on which every ambition stands. Without energy, clarity, and resilience, even the most exciting plans collapse. Prioritizing sleep, movement, nutrition, and medical checkups is not indulgent—it is disciplined. Your vitality is your competitive advantage in your next chapter.
3. Pursue New Ventures
The second act is not about slowing down; it is about redirecting your energy. Ed launched new ventures long after many would have settled into comfort. Reinvention can mean entrepreneurship, a creative pursuit, advisory work, or launching a passion project. What matters is momentum. Starting something new signals to yourself that growth did not end with your first career.
4. Share Your Story
Every experienced professional carries hard-earned lessons. Writing a memoir, mentoring, teaching, or documenting your journey creates meaning beyond performance metrics. Sharing your story is not about ego; it is about legacy. It transforms experience into transmission.
5. Master Your Decision-Making
Perhaps the most underestimated skill of all: understanding how you make decisions. Ed is deeply intentional. He reflects, filters options through long-term priorities, and moves forward with clarity. Decision-making is a muscle. The more self-aware you are about your patterns—fear-driven, status-driven, value-driven—the more aligned your choices become.
A Simple Decision Framework for Your Own Second Act
Inspired by Ed’s disciplined thinking, here is a practical roadmap:
Reflection
Step back. What truly matters now? Not twenty years ago. Now. What do you value? What do you want more—or less—of?
Prioritization
Identify five key areas that will define your next decade. Health, relationships, financial security, intellectual growth, contribution—choose consciously.
Action Planning
Break each priority into concrete steps. Ambition without structure is wishful thinking. Build a roadmap.
Accountability and Adaptation
Share your priorities with someone you trust. Revisit them regularly. Adjust as life evolves. Discipline and flexibility are not opposites—they are partners.
The second act is not an afterthought. It is a design challenge. With clarity, structure, and courage, it can become the most intentional and rewarding chapter of your life.
The question is simple: what are your five long-term priorities—and are you living by them?

