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      My latest episode began last Tuesday at 11:47 PM. I was doom-scrolling in bed while my husband, Mark, did that thing where he pretends to be asleep so he doesn’t have to hear my ideas.

      There’s a specific kind of delusion that sets in right around your 44th birthday. I call it the “Interior Renovation Cascade.” It starts innocently—a throw pillow you saw on Instagram. Then, suddenly, you’re on a first-name basis with the guy at the tile counter at Floor & Decor, and you’ve convinced yourself that removing a load-bearing wall is “just a little drywall dust.”

      I sat on the floor. The vintage oven hummed menacingly. My linen apron was stained with tomato paste. I had invited 18 people. The entertainment wasn’t going to be focaccia. It was going to be my funeral.

      The Gelato & Gasoline party was scheduled for Saturday. Entertainment would be me, dramatically sliding focaccia onto wooden boards. Lifestyle cred would be infinite.

      He opened one eye. “A what party?”

      I felt seen. I felt capable. I felt like maybe the reason my life felt a little stale wasn't my marriage or my job, but the fact that I didn't own a 1970s Alfa Romeo oven.

      So here’s to great ideas. And here’s to the even greater mess they leave behind. At least we know exactly how much olive oil we deserve. (Spoiler: all of it.) Kat Marie is a 40-something freelance writer and recovering renovator living in Chicago. Her next great idea involves backyard chickens. Mark is building a fence.

      By Friday, the kitchen was 94 degrees. The pilot light on the vintage oven had a personal vendetta against me. I tried to make a test batch. The dough came out looking like a topographic map of the moon—burnt craters surrounded by raw, gluey dough.

      The reel was perfect. A woman my age, wearing a linen apron (who wears an apron to cook pasta?), was pulling a golden, blistered focaccia out of a retro Italian oven. The caption read: “Sourdough is for your 30s. Focaccia is for when you know exactly how much olive oil you deserve.”

      The oven, as it turns out, was in a dusty warehouse in New Jersey. The seller, a man named Vinny who smelled like regret and Pall Malls, loaded it into my SUV. “It’s a beaut,” he said. “Just don’t touch the right side. Or look at it wrong.”

      The next morning, I announced to Mark, “I’m buying a vintage oven and throwing a Gelato & Gasoline party.”

      At 8 PM, Mark walked in, took one look at the smoke alarm duct-taped to a broom handle (my innovation), and said the five words that signal the death of all midlife projects: “The credit card was declined.”

      It’s a great idea… until it isn’t. By: Kat Marie, for 40SomethingMag

      That’s when I remembered the secret weapon of the over-40 woman: pivoting.

      The moral of this lifestyle story isn’t “don’t try new things.” It’s that at 40-something, the entertainment is rarely the oven, the vacation, or the perfect party. The entertainment is watching your friends help you carry a 300-pound mistake back down three flights of stairs the next morning, laughing so hard that Vinny the oven guy gives you your money back just to make you stop.