Not Done Yet
Not Done Yet is a podcast about what it really means to live with intent. Hosted by Rindraty Limtiaco, each short episode offers reflections, stories, and conversations on aging with purpose, navigating change, and holding on to the spark that says: I’m not done yet. Whether you’re in transition, searching for clarity, or simply curious about living with more intention, this is your space to pause, reflect, and move forward.
Pain Can Slowly Shrink Your Life
In this deeply personal episode of Not Done Yet, Rindraty opens up about preparing for knee replacement surgery after years of living with chronic pain. She reflects on how pain slowly changed the way she traveled, moved through daily life, and experienced the world — and why she’s finally ready to take this next step.
But this conversation is also about reinvention, resilience, and learning new things later in life. From documenting a cookbook project to teaching herself food photography and video production, Rindraty shares why becoming a beginner again can be both uncomfortable and deeply fulfilling.
Can We Talk About Loneliness?
In this episode of Not Done Yet, Rindraty Limtiaco explores the quiet kind of loneliness that often appears in midlife — when friendships shift, routines change, and connection feels harder to find. A reflective, compassionate look at how we can rebuild community and rediscover belonging.
When Balance Isn't Enough
We spend so much time trying to find balance — between work and rest, family and self, ambition and peace. But what if balance isn’t the goal? What if what we’re really looking for is alignment — living from our core, not our calendar.
In this episode of Not Done Yet, we talk about what alignment looks like, how to know when you’ve drifted off course, and why living in alignment might be the truest form of aging with intent.
The Age of Reinvention
Reinvention isn’t just for the young. In this episode of Not Done Yet, Rindraty Limtiaco explores why some of the boldest pivots in life happen later — when experience, resilience, and clarity make change feel less like a risk and more like freedom. From setbacks to successes, every chapter we’ve lived has prepared us for the next.
Longevity vs. Intention
We’re surrounded by conversations about longevity — supplements, diets, hacks, billionaires chasing 120. But does living longer automatically mean living better?
In this episode of Not Done Yet, host Rindraty Limtiaco explores the tension between adding years to our lives and adding life to our years. What does it really take to age with intent, and why might intention matter more than the number of birthdays we get to celebrate?
Listen in, reflect on your own choices, and consider what living with purpose looks like for you. Because we’re not done yet — and neither are you.
...Living With Intent: Choosing What Matters as We Grow Older
What does it really mean to live with intent? In this episode of Not Done Yet, Rindraty Limtiaco explores how aging well isn’t about resisting the years, but embracing them with clarity and choice. From naming the myths about growing older to redefining what “well” actually looks like, this conversation is about leaning into our next chapters with purpose — not just productivity. Living with intent means asking: What do I want more of? And what am I finally ready to let go of?
Taking Control of Your Life One Box at a Time
This week, the boxes got away from me. Between moving my sons into new chapters, managing family needs, and juggling deadlines, life felt like one giant shuffle of compartments that wouldn’t stay closed. Too many boxes. Not enough tape.
In this episode of Not Done Yet, I talk about what happens when the compartments spill over, why old wiring still makes me chase deadlines, and how I’m learning to live with lids that don’t quite fit. Sometimes the boxes stay open. Sometimes the tape doesn’t hold. And sometimes, that’s enough.
✨ A podcast ab...
Introducing Not Done Yet
In this first episode, I share why I started Not Done Yet and what you can expect from the journey ahead. After years in journalism and on the island of Guam, I’ve stepped into a new season of change — one filled with questions, restlessness, and possibility. This short reflection is both a confession and an invitation: the story isn’t finished, and neither are we. Not Done Yet is about holding on to the spark that says there’s still more ahead — more to give, more to create, more to become.