Entrepreneur published an article exploring how three women rebuilt their lives and careers after major personal disruption, turning loss into the foundation for leadership, purpose, and legacy. The piece, "How Loss Can Become the Fuel for Your Legacy," written by Wellness Eternal founder Lindsay O’Neill-O'Keefe, traces how back-to-back divorces, pandemic uncertainty, and the collapse of a business partnership became the unexpected catalyst for redefining her company and mission.
The article highlights two other women whose paths of reinvention helped shape O’Neill-O'Keefe's own journey. Pam Gold, founder of HACKD Fitness which evolved into PRTL, transformed her New York City performance-tech studio into a space centered on nervous system regulation, clarity, and whole-person wellness as the post-pandemic world shifted away from "faster" toward "fuller." Jenna Zwagil moved from homelessness to multimillion-dollar entrepreneurship, later losing her marriage and sense of identity before rebuilding her life around three principles: wisdom, wealth, and wellness, while raising four children and speaking publicly about sovereignty and alignment.
Together, these narratives reflect a broader trend among women entrepreneurs. As the article cites, single mothers now lead one in three women-owned businesses in the United States, with the majority pursuing growth not for vanity metrics but for generational impact. The piece underscores a shared theme that reinvention isn't a dramatic pivot but rather a series of small, values-driven decisions shaped by truth, resilience, and community.
The stories demonstrate how personal adversity can become the unexpected foundation for business transformation and meaningful legacy building in the entrepreneurial landscape. The full article can be read at Entrepreneur.


