Growing up is a strange process... our bodies hit the point where we are physically old enough to be parents ourselves when we are around 13 to 15 years old. The US government acknowledges us as adults a few years later when we are 18. Drinking establishments in the US acknowledge our maturity at 21. And then there are people who are 26 or 27 who speak about mistakes they made when they were 23, and which they supposedly are just now getting around to possibly correcting, as part of the normal process of growing up.
I wonder what the world would be like if more people tried to learn the lessons of childhood by the time they've reached earlier benchmarks of adulthood? I know people are living longer and longer these days, but I don't see that as necessitating a proportionate increase in the time spent developing into maturity.
Something to ponder...
I wonder what the world would be like if more people tried to learn the lessons of childhood by the time they've reached earlier benchmarks of adulthood? I know people are living longer and longer these days, but I don't see that as necessitating a proportionate increase in the time spent developing into maturity.
Something to ponder...
Re: