Second Opinion with Rosemarie Beltz
Somewhere along the way, many high-functioning adults learn to celebrate arrival—but quietly dismiss progress. The milestone birthday gets the dinner reservation. The promotion gets the congratulations. The visible achievement gets the acknowledgment. But what about the years of becoming? In this solo episode of Second Opinion, Rosemarie Beltz—medical journalist, healthcare insider, and cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years in medicine—explores why humans are psychologically wired to respond to milestones, why capable adults often move the goalposts on themselves, and what science reveals about recognition, motivation, burnout, and the emotional cost of endlessly waiting for “big enough.” This is not a conversation about birthdays. It’s a conversation about how we measure meaning. Drawing from behavioral science, psychology, resilience research, and lived clinical perspective, Rosemarie examines why progress matters biologically—not just emotionally—and why midlife may be the exact season to rethink what counts. If you’ve ever found yourself saying: “I’ll celebrate when…” this conversation is for you. What you’ll learn: * Why the “fresh start effect” makes birthdays, Mondays, and milestones psychologically powerful * How dopamine and behavioral reinforcement influence motivation and momentum * Why high-achieving adults are especially prone to moving the goalposts * What burnout science reveals about insufficient recognition and chronic effort * How self-efficacy shapes resilience, health behavior, and future decision-making * Why some of the most meaningful milestones in adulthood are invisible For Gen X listeners navigating health, reinvention, caregiving, changing identities, ambitious careers, or simply the strange emotional math of midlife—this is a thoughtful reframe. Because the years between milestones are not the waiting room. They are your life. About the Host Rosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist, medical journalist, and host of Second Opinion, an independently produced New York City podcast exploring midlife health, reinvention, healthcare decision-making, and the intersection of science and lived experience. The show reaches listeners in more than 50 countries. Sources referenced include: Behavioral science research on the Fresh Start Effect (Katy Milkman), Albert Bandura’s work on self-efficacy, Christina Maslach’s burnout research, Barbara Fredrickson’s broaden-and-build theory, and contemporary research on behavioral reinforcement and motivation. Explore more at RosemarieB.com Because better health—and better decisions—begin with better questions. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion! 💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com [https://rosemarieb.com/get-in-touch/].
48 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Second Opinion with Rosemarie Beltz community!