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E-mail: pwa@keatinginc.com
Phone: 773-975-4020

Designing Your Next Chapter with Intention

Divorce is not something most women plan for.

No one walks into marriage thinking, “One day, I’ll be redesigning my life from scratch.”

And yet, here you are.

While divorce can feel disorienting (and at times deeply painful), over the years I’ve had conversations with high-net-worth women who, with time and intentional planning, have described feeling more aligned, more peaceful, and more empowered than they once did.

Not because divorce is easy.
But because it forces clarity.

This is your moment to design your next chapter with intention, not by default, not by fear, and not by what you assume you can “afford,” but by what you genuinely want. And then? We build the financial roadmap to support it.

Step One: Give Yourself Permission to Dream Before You Do the Math

One of the biggest mistakes I see women make post-divorce is shrinking their vision before they ever explore it.

They ask:

  • “Can I afford to stay in this house?”
  • “Do I have to go back to work?”
  • “Should I cut back on travel?”
  • “Is this lifestyle unrealistic now?”

Those are reasonable questions, but they’re second-step questions.

First, we ask:

  • What do you want your daily life to look like?
  • Where do you want to live?
  • How do you want to spend your time?
  • Do you want to work? If so, how, and why?
  • What relationships feel important to nurture?
  • What kind of energy do you want your home and schedule to hold?

Before we build spreadsheets, we build vision.

Because designing your next chapter isn’t just about surviving financially. It’s about stepping into the fullest version of yourself.

The Emotional Design vs. The Financial Design

There are two parallel tracks in this work:

The Emotional & Relational Design

This is about identity, purpose, and agency.

  • Who are you becoming?
  • What do you value now?
  • What no longer fits?
  • What feels expansive?

Divorce often strips away roles that once defined you. It can feel destabilizing, but it’s also an invitation to consciously redefine yourself.

The Financial & Technical Design

This is where we translate vision into numbers.

  • What assets do you have?
  • How are they structured?
  • What income sources exist (or need to exist)?
  • What does sustainable spending look like?
  • How do taxes impact the plan?
  • How do executive compensation, stock options, RSUs, or deferred comp factor into long-term cash flow?
  • What happens in different market environments?

The amount of money you receive in your settlement matters.
The decisions you make with that money matter even more.

Your financial roadmap determines what your future life can sustainably support.

But here’s the key: we don’t let fear design your life.
We use data to inform your choices, not to limit your vision.

The Trap of “The Life I Think I Can Afford”

After divorce, many women unconsciously shift into scarcity mode, even when they have significant assets.

They default to:

  • Downsizing too quickly
  • Cutting lifestyle expenses before understanding their true cash flow
  • Avoiding new opportunities
  • Staying in “protection mode” indefinitely

And sometimes, yes, lifestyle adjustments are necessary. But often? The fear is louder than the math.

When we build a comprehensive financial roadmap, something powerful happens:

You move from guessing… to knowing.

Instead of asking, “Can I afford this?”
You start asking, “Does this align with my priorities?”

That is a completely different level of confidence.

Building a Financial Roadmap That Supports the Life You Actually Want

Here’s what intentional financial design looks like in practice:

Clarifying Your Lifestyle Baseline

We define what it actually costs to live your life—not the one you fear, but the one you desire.

This includes:

  • Housing
  • Travel
  • Philanthropy
  • Family support
  • Wellness
  • Work flexibility
  • Future relationships or remarriage considerations

We replace vague assumptions with concrete numbers.

Structuring Assets Strategically

Post-divorce wealth is often concentrated in:

  • Investment portfolios
  • Executive compensation packages
  • Real estate
  • Business interests
  • Retirement accounts

Each asset type behaves differently. Each has different tax implications. Each impacts liquidity and long-term sustainability.

We align asset structure with lifestyle goals, not just return targets.

Designing Sustainable Income

Your roadmap should answer:

  • Where does my income come from?
  • How reliable is it?
  • What market conditions could disrupt it?
  • How do I build resilience into the plan?

For some women, that includes returning to work, but on their terms. For others, it means building income from investments efficiently and tax-strategically.

The goal is not just wealth preservation.
It’s financial autonomy.

Running the Scenarios

We model:

  • Different spending levels
  • Market downturns
  • Longevity assumptions
  • Healthcare costs
  • New relationships or family dynamics

Confidence doesn’t come from optimism. It comes from stress-testing the plan.

The Power of Integrating Vision and Strategy

When emotional clarity and financial precision come together, something shifts.

You stop reacting. You start designing.

You stop thinking, “What do I have left?” You start asking, “What do I want to build?”

And over time, for some women, there can be a quiet realization:
“I would never have chosen this path, but I wouldn’t go back either.”

Not because divorce was easy. But because they finally built a life that reflected who they truly are.

You Deserve More Than Survival

Designing your next chapter with intention is not indulgent. It’s responsible.

Because the settlement you receive, the investments you structure, the spending decisions you make, and the career choices you consider today will shape the next 20–30 years of your life.

This is not just about numbers. It’s about alignment. It’s about agency. It’s about becoming your fullest self, with a financial foundation strong enough to support her.

A Gentle Invitation

If you’re in the midst of divorce, or newly on the other side, and you’re unsure how to translate your assets into a clear, confident path forward, you don’t have to do this alone.

At Purposeful Wealth Advisors®, we help high-net-worth women move from uncertainty to clarity by aligning their financial strategy with the life they truly want to build.

If you’re ready to design your next chapter with intention, I invite you to schedule a Clarity First™ conversation. It’s a focused, thoughtful discussion designed to help you understand where you are, what’s possible, and what your next strategic steps should be.

Because this next chapter?
It deserves to be built on purpose.

Clarity First™ is a proprietary process developed and trademarked by Purposeful Wealth Advisors®, used under Keating Financial Advisory Services, Inc. This process is not registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Use of this process does not imply any guarantee of results and should not be interpreted as an endorsement by any regulatory authority.

Beth Kraszewski recipient of