• @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Childhood: Adults know what they are doing

    Adulthood: No one knows what they are doing

    Usually around early 30s for sure

    • @AllonzeeLV
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      9 months ago

      Adulthood: No one knows what they are doing

      A lot of people miss the implicit reality of this wisdom: basically everyone pretending to know what they’re doing is trying to scam you, sell you something, or both.

      • @cmbabul
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        59 months ago

        Actual smart people don’t have to sell it

        • @shneancy
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          9 months ago

          smart people don’t know what they’re doing even more. They’re just smart enough to pretend well

      • @samus12345
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        9 months ago

        The naive part is that teens think they know what they’re doing.

  • @MacedWindow
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    189 months ago

    Yeah I’m almost 30 and if I ever click over to full adult its not going to be anytime soon

  • @[email protected]
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    179 months ago

    It seems to me like 30s adulthood is more “ok, I get the hang of this thing now”.

    You’re not necessarily more mature, you don’t have all the answers, you might suck at paying bills on time, or whatever. But, what changes is that not too many situations are truly new anymore. You’ve accumulated enough life experiences that in a new situation, or when a new problem comes up, you at least have some skills to draw on – even if those skills are just calling up a parent to ask their advice.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      You’re not necessarily more mature

      I thought that was the case until overhearing people in their 20s talking to each other.

    • @Bondrewd
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      9 months ago

      Neuroplasticity usually slows down by the time you are around 25. Lots of people who were criminals usually normalize by that age and rejoin society.

      If you cant pay your bills by your 30s, you are highly irresponsible and probably already had the short end of the stick. Anything you learn will have to come from the immense stress to retrigger said neuroplasticity. Meaning it wont be fun at all.

      Most people in the far less wealthy countries like Hungary just stay with their family. It usually means an already owned house or apartment with the ability to save up.

      Being in debt is also a foreign concept to me. I feel way too highly conflicted with the idea of shelling out thousands of dollars I dont have.

      If anything, this jumping into life with student loan, having bought a car and making a family at the same time suggests high amount of trust in the system. It is a way too enticing offer that easily lures you into a trap.

  • @AllonzeeLV
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    9 months ago

    From everything I’ve seen, the modern expectation of what it means to “grow up” is just validating and taking ideological ownership of the corrupt, exploitative systems of the people that fucked everything up to begin with. This expectation is largely pushed by the exploited, beaten dog victims of those systems, as misery loves company.

    That’s gonna be a no from me, dawg. If you want to spend most of your waking life self-flagellating for sociopathic profiteers in hopes you’ll become one of their favorites, and subsisting for decades saving to finally enjoy life as a half blind, half deaf withered husk with 3 marbles left rolling around upstairs, if you make it that far, knock yourself out, grown up.

  • @Dicska
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    89 months ago

    Nearing 40, I still treat some adults like I used to when I was ~16-18. Then it hits me that I’m ~5 years older than them.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      54, working with people mostly 20-40, and having to remind myself my age all the time, except when they don’t get my adolescence pop culture references. And they think I look 10 years younger, though that can be inability to evaluate ages 🤣

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      Age is how many laps around the sun the earth did since you were born, that’s it.

      Maturity now… Well, I’ve seen 14 years olds more mature than me lol

  • katy ✨
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    59 months ago

    that means bilbo was essentially a teenager which makes so much sense

    • @turmacar
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      39 months ago

      Not if you think of The Hobbit as a YA adventure story.

  • rumschlumpel
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    19 months ago

    Worth noting that hobbits canonically get to be 90 to 100 years old on average, despite living in a society with what appears to be rennaissance or early modern-level technology. So they just have more time to figure themselves out than we do.

    But consider this: a 50yo dude has more experience than a 20yo dude, but would he actually get that experience if everyone treated them like 15yo right up until they’re like 30? And in some ways, even today people aren’t considered fully grown up at 20 - e.g. many political offices have age requirements of 30 or 40 years (depending on where you live, of course).

  • @Duamerthrax
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    -59 months ago

    Or we can stop infantilizing people below the age of Boomer.

    • @ben_dover
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      39 months ago

      when i was in my 20s, i thought i’d have it all figured out and that i’m a “proper” adult. now in my 30s i doubt i’m being mature enough to call myself an adult.

      it’s not about looking down on others. the older you get and the more you see and experience, the more you realize that we stay children in many aspects of our lives, as you’re able to reflect on a longer life time.

      admittedly many people never get around to the reflection part though, and think they’re smart and superior just because of their age, and are smug assholes with the social competence of a kindergarten child

      • @Duamerthrax
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        49 months ago

        Children don’t have agency. Adults do.

        Just saying that when a 16 year old wants to change up the classes in their school to prepare for college, they shouldn’t be talked down to and stonewalled. The “adults” in the room then just though I would grow out of ambition.

        • @ben_dover
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          9 months ago

          i agree. though i think the meme isn’t aiming at that, more like adults figuring out how immature they are themselves

  • Subverb
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    -69 months ago

    I know a guy whose 29 year old son lives at home with him. No job; gets an allowance.

    • @AllonzeeLV
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      9 months ago

      Why begrudge that in a nation filled with fancy lad/lass nepo babies like Alice Walton and Donald Trump who’ve never done a day of real work despite being born into great wealth?