| FAQ |
| Members List |
| Calendar |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
| Serious Debates & News Debate and discussion about political, moral, philosophical, celebrity and news topics. |
| Register to reply Log in to reply |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#26 | |||
|
||||
|
Senior Member
|
When I was 22 and got my first mortgage. I woke up on completion day and thought, **** I am in a world of debt.
__________________
|
|||
|
|
|
|
#27 | ||
|
|||
|
-
|
Quote:
. ... ...... .. ...... .. ...
Last edited by user104658; 08-02-2018 at 02:08 PM. |
||
|
|
|
|
#28 | |||
|
||||
|
Sod orf
|
|
|||
|
|
|
|
#29 | |||
|
||||
|
Senior Member
|
Quote:
|
|||
|
|
|
|
#31 | ||
|
|||
|
Senior Member
|
When I moved to Portugal and moved in with my boyfriend. I still don't feel like a proper adult, but that's the closest anyway.
|
||
|
|
|
|
#32 | ||
|
|||
|
-
|
You just need to look at this forum for proof really.
We have a whole age range from teenagers right up to pensioners... and nary a "grown up" in sight .
|
||
|
|
|
|
#33 | ||
|
|||
|
Senior Member
|
Every time i got a new responsibility i felt like i was all grown up.Now i have the ultimate responsibility i think i feel more grownup than ever.
Still an immature twat sometimes though
|
||
|
|
|
|
#34 | ||
|
|||
|
-
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
#35 | ||
|
|||
|
Senior Member
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
#37 | |||
|
||||
|
1.5x speed
|
I think I felt like adult at a young age, but I couldn't say when that because it happened without my acknowledgement.
Probably whenever I realized my single mother was actually a child (mentally) and was too emotionally unstable to be fully cognizant of what was going around her, much less a functioning parent. That put the responsibility of my future on my own shoulders, since I had no where else to put it. I was her caretaker and also her only real "friend" ... and it became pretty obvious when my grandmother and uncle stayed out regularly to be a caretaker for someone else (mostly due to money). I was really the only one who didn't have mental/emotional disabilities who wasn't also physically impaired (all 3 had movement disorders). One didn't have a voice (literally) which was associated with a different form of the movement disorder that also affects the vocal cords. He was a total hermit in every sense of the word and very afraid to be seen even stepping outside by normal people. Even in his much older age, he is much the same. So I felt like I was really the only one he could "talk" to amidst the chaos and he was already an adult. My mother was prone to tantrums due to her oversensitive (and undiagnosed bipolar) nature and my grandfather who was a schizophrenic assumed my mother was out to get him. And my mother was prone to paranoia as well and both would hide behind the sides of doorways and listen in on other people's conversations... while my grandfather sometimes would change his own meds without telling anyone, and he would start to hallucinate and claimed that my grandmother and uncle were out to kill him. He used to sometimes take off to God's know where and we had to look for him. One time he ran out into the neighborhood and walked into a halfway house and got into bed... and then told the residents he was checking in. ![]() So yeah, I have no clue when my milestones were because there so many that could be deemed "you're an adult" milestones. I have a problem deciding which thing had the most influence on me, because there were so many things and it was probably my grandmother's influence, the influence of her sisters, and aunt and all being very strong female role models model that kept me in check and gave me my worldview of if it don't kill you.... As for when I settled down (which for some, this is the period they would say they may feel more like a traditional adult?), I moved out at 19 half-way across country and have been with my husband since until we moved back. I would say it began there as my husband and I were already really close partially due to us both sharing war stories--his other people's literal stories and then my own. When my life finally slowed down was when we finally got married when I was about 26, which was a few days after I graduated college. We moved back to Houston, I started to care-take for my other grandmother (who has a wonderful spirit and a joy to be around), but then my husband I started to look for a house while my he was getting settled in law-enforcement. When you start paying for a home and income taxes, and having to worry about schools and where your children will grow up, you start to feel like a "shareholder" of society. You start to feel "grown up". Especially in your local community and when you read daily news, you feel like what you have now have an obligation to participate in the local politics... if you're still moving around in your early 20's state to state or just not yet out of college and settled/established as a human being, you're not going to feel it's worth your time worrying about what is going on around you.. we tend to care more about what's going on on inside in those terms rather than the outside. But when you become a family or when you become really attached to a geographical location, that does tend to change your focus from you to your external environment (I think)...
__________________
![]() |
|||
|
|
|
|
#40 | |||
|
||||
|
Quand il pleut, il pleut
|
...being an adult is being fully grown and fully developed and I’m not sure I’ve ever felt that in many ways...I guess though, my body became fully grown and fully developed, somewhere in my later teen years..and the law was telling me I could do adult things, I could vote, I could drink alcohol or smoke a cigarette if I wanted to, it’s all legal now, was what I was being told...but I don’t think I felt any different...I stopped being a dependant when I didn’t live with my parents anymore and then eventually had my own little dependants...I don’t think my independence from my parents made me feel I had finally become an adult though ...because I was always asking my parents stuff...mum, how do you cook this or what would you do, this is a bit tricky this situation...how can I do this and that, type of thing....then I had my own dependents, my own children...and that didn’t make me feel adult either, it just made me quite terrified and clueless...if I hadn’t had my mum in those early days of parenthood, who was the real adult...I’m not sure my children would have survived, well my first child anyway...I just screamed help and my mum was there to save my first born from my cluelessness....
....anyways, every stage and every phase I’ve gone through, has just been different in that they’ve become ‘firsts’...so, many aspects have often left me feeling a bit lost and not very adult at all...I have adult children now and being the parent of adult children is different from being the parenting of dependant children...so each day I’m always always learning to try to become an adult with that.. ...that stepping back to respect their adulthood, while trying to know when they need you to become ‘the adult’ to them again, now and again...and then there are so many other things in life, like illnesses and huge things to overcome, when an adult can become a child again and so desperately need their parents or those around them to take more of an ‘adult role’ for them...I don’t ever want to become ‘an adult’ by definition because I don’t want to become ‘fully’ anything, I want to discover and learn and I want to continue experiencing all of those unknown ‘firsts’, if I’m able to...I’ll become an adult when I die, I guess...that’s something I’ll have to go through and experience completely on my own, so that will probably make me a proper adult and all grown up...
__________________
|
|||
|
|
|
|
#41 | ||
|
|||
|
Remembering Kerry
|
Quote:
The personal accounts of some members on this thread are really sad and inspiring too. Such as jaxie and TS. Your statement is also perhaps relevant to myself too. When particularly my Grandmother, my Mum's Mother died. That gave me an awakening across the board,as you say,what and who is really important,priority changes. I stepped up to support my Mum, since Grandma died on my Mum's birthday too. I'm not sure I'm always an adult as to behaviour in life completely,I can be really childish in some ways but the loss of my Grandmother,was a point where I'd say a wake up call as to life came my way. It changed so much after her loss due to her being a massive guide and influence in my life to that point. Last edited by joeysteele; 09-02-2018 at 09:40 AM. |
||
|
|
|
|
#42 | |||
|
||||
|
The voice of reason
|
moving into my first flat 500 miles from home at 21
|
|||
|
|
|
|
#43 | |||
|
||||
|
Senior Member
|
|
|||
|
|
| Register to reply Log in to reply |
|
|