Childhood was over the moment they hit puberty. I think it's insulting to think of teenagers as children.
I am definitely someone who considers anyone under 18 to be a child unless they act super mature. But I'm also someone who thinks its kind of ridiculous that after someone reaches a certain age (like 18) they suddenly become something else as if it's something that happens over night. I never really liked that.
Still, I do group childhood and adolescence together. But I can see and understand why others don't.
I have loads of respect for teenagers who get a freaking job.
That's something that even some adults won't do.
I wasn't even aware there were abnormal jobs.I agree.
Normal jobs are good too, though.
I wasn't even aware there were abnormal jobs.
I wasn't even aware there were abnormal jobs.
I absolutely agree. Maybe that's also part of why I consider so many of the youth to be children as well, because a lot of the 13-17, and even 18-24 year olds act pretty similar to each other.I think it's experience that really makes the man/woman. Some people never really leave childhood, and some leave too early.
Freelancing isn't a normal job, it's just basically the equivalent of doing household chores. (Except it's not chores and it's usually not for someone you're living with or even know very well.)
I find it far more accurate to judge someone's maturity, decency, and level of intelligence by their behavior and actions rather than go off of the general consensus of their age group.
Uh....how is it the equivalent of household chores? I have never heard that comparison.
Some people shine with a different kind of maturity and wisdom than what you get by growing up, and it naturally comes to them… Maybe there are different arrays of things at play than just what's been laid out here.I've mentioned before I care more about what experience you've had, but there are also some experiences that are basically locked to you before a certain age, and others that are highly unlikely before a certain age, which give a baseline to consider people of different ages. Because you just can't say things like "I'm going to wait to hear this 3 year old speak before I assume it's not mature enough to drive", so clearly there's a line for everyone. I can assume most 16 year olds won't have held down steady full-time jobs for more than 3 months, won't have lived on their own, won't have years of driving experience, won't have to juggle bills, pretty safely. I can also guess, although with a bit less certainty, that 16 year olds won't be cooking a lot of meals themselves, won't be acting as primary caregivers for younger children, won't be learning to manage money. That's not a comprehensive list, but it gets the gist of it - there are some things that change you and mature you that people of certain ages just are not going to have done, and some that they may have done, which is part of why different 16 year olds have different maturity levels.
Some people shine with a different kind of maturity and wisdom than what you get by growing up, and it naturally comes to them… Maybe there are different arrays of things at play than just what's been laid out here.
Don't all sorts of maturity and wisdom deal with real life experiences the same as one another? And by this logic, shouldn't you consider the learned maturity and intuitive wisdom equally?I mean, maybe, but the kind of maturity I'm talking about is the maturity to deal with real-life situations and live in this world, which is developed through dealing with real-life situations and living in this world. Maybe there's some kind of spiritual maturity or something, but honestly that doesn't interest me. Even intellectual maturity needs honing over years past high school (excepting the family of 12 year old college graduates).
The definition of wisdom inherently includes experience.