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coach men messenger bag JP Morgan. By age 24, Loder was making $250,000 a year.Loder then headed to Stanford Graduate School of Business, where she was co president of the ski club. After graduating, she took a job with a San Francisco private equity firm.It was the spring of 2007 and the stock market was on fire. Her hours were consumed with deal after deal.The Dow just kept climbing. In April, it crossed 13,000. By July, it had passed 14,000.One of the firm's partners came out of his office and announced the milestone. Many workers had their own investments."We were cheering. Everybody was in a good mood," Loder recalls. "And then within a few months, it all came to a halt."Debt markets dried up. Few companies wanted to do mergers or acquisitions. Those that did couldn't get a loan to finance the deal."We were literally twiddling our thumbs in '08 and '09," Loder says.Boredom set in, and Loder questioned why she was drawn to Wall Street in the first place.I was totally unhappy and I couldn't understand why," she says. "I just felt lost. I felt like something was missing from my life."So she quit.Soul searching took Loder about as far from finance as possible. She learned hypnosis and techniques to get subjects to conjure memories believed to be from past lives. She spent 10 days doing a silent meditation retreat."All this crazy stuff out there, it actually works," she says. "I was kind of shocked."Today, at 34, Loder runs her own business helping women in finance and Silicon Valley who are unfulfilled by their careers. The company, Akoya Power, runs group coaching programs, corporate workshops and luxury retreats, which