At 48, Dr Meg Forbes is not your standard university graduate.
Like many, Meg is still with her high school boyfriend — but they’ve been together for three decades and they’re married.
She also has two kids (and a beautiful labrador called Smudge). She’s a wildlife photographer and a university lecturer. And this is her fourth degree.
Meg is part of a wave of women who reject the idea that your career is set in stone once you hit 40. It makes sense, with retirement age getting later and the cost of living getting higher, why would you settle and spend another 20 to 30 years in a job you don’t love anymore?
When she completes her Masters of Clinical Psychology in August at the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ), Meg will officially start a new career.
Growing up Meg says she was anything but academic. "I attended two schools in England and four in South Africa. At the time no one understood neurodivergence in girls, let alone Developmental coordination disorder." DCD, also known as dyspraxia, is a condition that impacts physical coordination and can present as clumsiness in otherwise healthy children.
"I just scraped through each year. None of my teachers understood why someone who was consistently near the top of the class for literacy could barely write — and no one bothered to investigate further. I tried to compensate by learning to write with both hands, and swapping every couple of lines when my hands got tired, but my work was still far below standard and my teachers called me lazy."
Meg finished school but her "abysmal" results ruled out university so she went backpacking and put herself through technical college in the UK. Her first career was in IT, as a database programmer. However, when her son started kindy a diagnosis changed everything.