Everything in London still moves at break‑neck speed, even for those who have passed the milestone of forty. The Evening Standard’s feature paints a familiar portrait: people in their forties who say they feel much younger in their heads while carrying heavier responsibilities in their working lives. As one 43‑year‑old who runs an advertising agency told the paper, “I still feel in my head that I’m 25,” even as she manages teams, budgets and the expectations that come with seniority.

Behind that personal testimony sits a broader labour market reality. Census and employment data show London has a higher concentration of professional and managerial roles than other parts of the country, and middle‑aged workers disproportionately occupy these posts. That means many in their forties are not just leading teams but are accountable for substantial sums and complex decisions: government budget documents underline how departmental leaders oversee spending measured in tens or hundreds of billions of pounds, a scale that brings both authority and fiscal responsibility.

That responsibility helps explain lifestyle trade‑offs evident in the journalism: the late‑nights and heavy drinking that once marked corporate social life are being replaced by curated socialising, fitness regimes, supplements and earlier bedtimes. The Standard observed a shift from “last one standing” culture to more selective evenings out; workplace research reinforces the change, noting that employers and event organisers are increasingly expected to provide inclusive alternatives to alcohol‑centric gatherings so multigenerational teams aren’t excluded.

Longer hours and the distinct pressures of the capital amplify those choices. Reporting on Office for National Statistics figures has long shown Londoners work longer weeks than the UK average, a pattern linked to the city’s concentration of finance, tech and other high‑skill sectors, and to the high cost of living that pushes people to put in extra hours. The result is a tempo of life in which career momentum, commuting and childcare can conspire to compress personal time, nudging many towards efficient, health‑focused routines rather than open‑ended socialising.

Parenting and entrepreneurship further complicate the picture. The Standard’s piece sketches a generation balancing senior roles with family commitments and side projects; many forty‑somethings report using the weekend for family and the weeknights for brief, high‑value social interactions or exercise. Hybrid working and diverse employee needs are changing how colleagues connect outside the office: grossly alcohol‑centred events are no longer assumed to be the default, according to workplace guidance, which recommends event labelling, non‑alcoholic options and alternatives that accommodate different lifestyles and life stages.

Psychologically, the mismatch between chronological and felt age helps make sense of the behaviour. Academic work on subjective age finds adults over forty commonly report feeling substantially younger than their years, with an “attractor” feeling close to the mid‑twenties for many. That sense of youth can be energising — it supports ongoing learning, career reinvention and the pursuit of fitness — but it can also mask the cumulative strain of long working hours and managerial responsibility.

For London’s forty‑somethings the result is a paradox: a generation that feels young, acts deliberately to preserve health and social capital, and shoulders significant organisational and financial responsibility. Policymakers and employers, from boardrooms to human‑resources teams, may need to pay closer attention to that balancing act — not only to sustain productivity, but to ensure careers at the midlife stage remain healthy, inclusive and sustainable.

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Source: Noah Wire Services