What are the commonalities though of maturity - are there any anymore? Is it about a level of commitment? Or non-commitment? Or commitment to self?
If I had to theorize what (if any) traits might point to this generalized idea of maturity, my checklist would include items like open-mindedness, patience, tolerance, acceptance, respect for others, and a healthy measure of self-confidence.
"Commitment" is a word I dislike almost automatically, because too often I find it applied to people like me by those with a more family-oriented mindset, and it's usually pertaining to my decision to remain, for now, single and child-free. I really do not believe one's capacity or desire to commit to relationships, advancing through the reproductive/romantic stages of life as our culture trains us to do, has much bearing on one's volume of maturity.
I find that it can be more potentially negative when these issues are centered upon career instability, but it often seems that deeper problems are usually at work in cases such as those, and I've already covered that in my first post.
So, knowing that I have something of a personal bias against the term, would you describe to what degree you'd link the concepts of commitment and maturity? What relationship do those ideas have, in your opinion?
PeaceBaby said:
You do recognize though that the reason you think it is awesome is because of your cultural context? The cultural significance we currently place on the expression and manifestation of individualism? Just like if/when I make it to 90 there will be a lot of people listening to 80's music, if/when you make it to 90, there will be I guess a whole bunch of geriatric people with raspberry red hair.
Everything becomes an anachronism at some point.
I know what you're trying to say, and with regard to cultural phenomena at large, I would like to agree with you. Let's consider music, for example. There was a time when Rob Zombie and Marilyn Manson were staples of counterculture rock for the (arguably) goth crowd, but as these artists have aged, so has their fan base. What was once (arguably!) rebellious is now merely a potential indicator of generation.
With regard to the particular example I gave of myself as an individual, however, I'm going to have to disagree. The reason I think my hair color is awesome has zero to do with cultural context and everything to do with the fact that it looks damn good with my complexion. (If you imagined a primary, rock star red - it's not.) Anyway, my point there was that as people age, they tend to make subtle adjustments to their appearance to look more "age appropriate," to
not stick out like sore thumbs. It would probably look a bit strange for a 90-year-old woman to wear the dark red hair she wore when she was 25, but since I've come to think of it as being so very
me, I wouldn't put it past myself to just go for it. Some might view this position as a marker of immaturity; I would argue that it's simply a comfort in my own skin.
PeaceBaby said:
I find this fascinating. What does it look like when someone lets go of their inner child? Do they stop making cookies? Are those the things we are supposed to be doing to nurture that inner child? Why those things?
I cited
those things because you expressed surprise that one could take such delight in doing those specific things at age thirty.
That's a good place to start, though. I think a key element of retaining the inner child comes from taking delight in the seemingly small stuff. It's easy, as a busy adult, to let stress and scheduling dominate one's life - but it doesn't have to be this way all the time.
The adult bakes cookies because his kids needs to bring said cookies to the 4th grade Christmas party, but his inner child has a blast doing it because he's making a delicious treat, he can be creative while decorating them,
and he gets to spend time with his kids on this project. The adult has a chore; the inner child has fun.
When people let go of the inner child, they adopt a certain seriousness that becomes hard to penetrate. Life becomes a string of shoulds and supposed-tos, while spontaneity and creativity often suffer. It's depressing.
PeaceBaby said:
Thanks for helping me explore more!
No problem, happy to share my input.
