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Rethinking The Age Of Adulthood
cbs ^ | 10-27-03

Posted on 10/27/2003 7:04:23 PM PST by wheelgunguru

AP) Sunshine filters through the window into her bedroom - a cozy upstairs hideaway with light yellow walls and a blue floral comforter covering a twin bed. It is quiet, even peaceful - maybe too much so for the young woman who resides here.

"It's a pretty, little room. But you kind of lose your identity in it. It's not really mine," Amy Powell says, surveying the few belongings that are hers - a laptop, a few framed photos and a weathered notebook filled with the names and addresses of the many employers she's contacted for a job.

To say that this is not what she'd imagined is a bit of an understatement: She is 22 years old, a recent college graduate, living in her parents' suburban home - and, as she puts it, still waiting to become a "real adult."

"To be honest, it's kind of depressing," says Powell, who's working as a waitress at a steakhouse while she searches for a job in journalism.

A weak economy has left many college grads and young professionals in a similar predicament, slowing their march to independence from the folks at home. But experts who track human development will tell you: The financial downturn is only the most recent factor pushing the start of adulthood later and later.

Gone is the notion that adulthood officially started at 18, when one typically graduated from high school - or even 21, the modern-day age limit for drinking alcohol.

Now many experts simply consider those markers along the way. And it appears that Americans agree. A University of Chicago survey, released earlier this year, found that most think adulthood begins at age 26.

"It's not like one day you wake up and you're an adult. It's much more gradual," says developmental psychologist Jeffrey Arnett. A professor at the University of Maryland, he is writing a book on what he calls "emerging adulthood" - the period between age 18 to 25.

"The new life course has become much more spread out and flexible," Arnett says, noting the fact that many of today's young people are staying in school longer, marrying later and delaying having children.

The University of Chicago survey found that most people defined getting married and having children as markers for true adulthood. But even that doesn't ring true for many twenty-somethings.

"I just graduated from law school, I've been in a relationship with my significant other for over seven years, and I'm buying a house - and none of that makes me feel like a grown-up," says Daniel Gluck, a 27-year-old who lives in Honolulu. "But I'm starting to lose my hair and that's beginning to make me feel grown up pretty quickly."

Others are shunning the idea of home ownership, even with the rock-bottom interest rates that have made it possible for buy property right out of college.

"I don't believe that my sense of being is dependent on what I own," says Ashley Mohney, a 24-year-old Chicagoan and avowed renter who works as a library clerk at a law firm. "I don't need a status symbol such as a house or property to feel complete or accomplished."

"That comes from my writing, playing guitar and good friends," says Mohney, an avid poetry and short-story writer outside of work.

Some young people say their hesitation about marriage, family and home ownership comes from watching how others - from parents to peers - have responded to the usual trappings of adulthood.

"I've had a glimpse into their lives and realize what a change those things represent," 23-year-old Lisa Mixon says of friends who got married and started families right after college. "Many of them always feel rushed, are too busy to go out with friends - and, well, aren't happy."

Now working as marketing director at Harcum College in Bryn Mawr, Pa., Mixon moved in with her parents after college while working a retail job. She has agreed to stay on for the next two years to help care for an ill parent and chip in on household duties.

Her focus, she says, is "to enjoy my time now, not as a complete adult - just yet."

For Powell, reaching true adulthood would be as simple as getting a job that allowed her to move out of her parents' home in Clinton Township, a large suburban area a few miles northeast of Detroit.

"I'd be in my own little apartment, in a city with a job that puts my degree to use, paying my own bills, with nobody claiming me as a dependent," she says. Marriage and children will come later.

It is a very different life than her mother had.

When her mom was 22, she was married and pregnant - and off to a Louisiana Army base with her husband, now a retired Army engineer officer.

"We had so much more responsibility at that age," says Sue Powell, now 45. Like a lot of women of her generation and those preceding hers, Sue Powell left college to get married. So as her children grew, she promised herself, "I will never let my kids do the same thing."

"We wanted them to have so many more experiences," she says as she stirs a pot of potato soup she's made for her daughter to eat before work.

But the younger Powell feels like her life is on hold. The money she earns covers her car payment and cell phone bill, though it's been a stretch since her parents recently asked her to start paying $100 toward her car insurance.

"Maybe it will be a little motivator," her mother says, a comment that draws a somewhat stunned and embarrassed look from her daughter.

Even those who have found jobs in their chosen field are feeling the pinch.

"I think this economy has stunted the meter of defining adulthood because so many people do not have a choice in whether to be financially independent or not," says Kristin Lunardini, a 24-year-old who works for a public relations firm. She will soon be moving from Chicago back with her parents in Aurora, Ill., to help pay off some bills and save money.

Whatever the factors that are causing it, much of society seems to be embracing the notion of delayed adulthood. And a whole line of increasingly common sayings are indicating a ripple effect - "30 is the new 20" and "40 is the new 30" and so on.

Elaine Wethington, a sociologist in the department of human development at Cornell University, believes the sayings have a ring of truth.

However, there is an exception, she notes: The age that women start to become infertile has not increased.

"So women really need to think how they're going to fit children in. You can't just let it emerge," she says. "You have to plan for it."

On the other end of the spectrum, she's also noticed that the parents of her students are more reluctant than generations past to let go of their children.

"I'm 53 and I remember when I went to college, my parents considered me an adult. And I was pretty much on my own and allowed to make my own decisions," she says. "Today, I think parents at some level want the child to still be dependent a little bit longer, if they're going to keep paying the bills."

Powell has definitely felt that from her own parents, especially since she's moved back home. And her mom doesn't deny it.

"I love having them here," she says of her two children, the younger of whom is still in college. "But I can tell Amy's changed very, very much. Living here - it's been difficult."

She's noticed that her daughter is sleeping a little later, probably because she's getting discouraged. She's also more standoffish, her mother says.

The younger Powell acknowledges that she gets annoyed by some of her parents' questions and suggestions.

"They say, 'Oh maybe you could work at the library and put together their newsletter' - stuff that's kind of" - she pauses for a moment and lowers her voice - "silly."

One recent weekend, her parents insisted that she not drive to visit her boyfriend, who's still a student at Western Michigan University, where she went to school. They told her she should stay home to work on more job applications.

She ended up staying home. "But I wasn't very happy about it," she says, as she drives to the restaurant where she works.

Later that evening, she displays a handful of change left by a customer as a tip.

"This is why I still live at home," she says with a dejected look.

She counts it: "97 cents."


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: adulthood
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To: GeronL
Mentally adulthood seems to start at about 28
 
With me it was 17 in Basic, if you take a gander at the avg age of the folks on Aircraft Carriers, towing around 50 - 80 Million Dollar Aircraft, Launching and Receiving 24/7 (the most Dangerous Job in America) these Americans are average age 19, (it really freaked out the Socialist Russian Generals & Admirals when we gave them tours, they thought we were pulling their collective legs)... Put the responsibility on the shoulders, be there for guidance and council.  
 
Hell an Adult can be a 13 yr old without guidance, I got my PADI International SCUBA card from a kid that was 13 years old, he was an American Kid living in the Philippines, he had an Office, Shop, Vehicles, Secretaries, etc. and he was as far as I know the youngest Certified PADI Instructor in the World.
 
Without confronting reality, you can spend an entire life as a child, I give you Ted Kennedy as an example.

21 posted on 10/27/2003 8:12:18 PM PST by TexasTransplant (If you can read this, Thank a Teacher. If this is in English, Thank a Soldier)
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To: TexasTransplant
Read 11 and 16. I should have aded it to my first post.
22 posted on 10/27/2003 8:15:47 PM PST by GeronL (Visit www.geocities.com/geronl)
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To: wheelgunguru
I suspect most 12-year-olds of 100 years ago were more mature than most 21-year-olds of today.
23 posted on 10/27/2003 8:16:03 PM PST by supercat (Why is it that the more "gun safety" laws are passed, the less safe my guns seem?)
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To: wheelgunguru
The people in this article are totally clueless and will probably remain that way til the day they go over the rainbow. IMHO, clueless children are typically the product of clueless, overly indulgent, parents. So, the parents of these 20-ish adolescents are merely prolonging the agony for all involved. And, of course, they all just luv the Democratic pahty!!
24 posted on 10/27/2003 8:16:41 PM PST by Chu Gary
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To: wheelgunguru
Thank God the only times I'm at my parent's house, it is as a GUEST.
25 posted on 10/27/2003 8:19:30 PM PST by Dan from Michigan ("I don't want to Raise Taxes" "I think everything must be looked at" - Jennifer Granholm. (D))
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To: GeronL
Read 11 and 16. I should have added it to my first post.
 
See the Ted Kennedy analogy was PEERRRFECCT. 

26 posted on 10/27/2003 8:20:09 PM PST by TexasTransplant (If you can read this, Thank a Teacher. If this is in English, Thank a Soldier)
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To: supercat
"I suspect most 12-year-olds of 100 years ago were more mature than most 21-year-olds of today.

Well, then it's all the same, because they had about the same amount of years ahead of them. Never forget, work expands to fill the time allotted to it, I think that may be true with life too.


27 posted on 10/27/2003 8:33:32 PM PST by jocon307 (Proud Member - VRWC!)
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To: giotto
What would (did) Jesus do? He stayed with his "parents" until he was 30, didn't he? What was He doing all that time?

But his mother was pregnant at 15, just before being married. Surely the Holy Spirit didn't knock up a child.

28 posted on 10/27/2003 8:34:41 PM PST by Lester Moore
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To: 4mycountry
The original poster would have been clearer by saying "minimum age" instead of age limit. An age limit would have meant the maximum age.

...Main Entry: 1lim·it
Pronunciation: 'li-m&t
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French limite, from Latin limit-, limes boundary
Date: 14th century
1 a : something that bounds, restrains, or confines b : the utmost extent
29 posted on 10/27/2003 8:46:46 PM PST by Graybeard58
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To: wheelgunguru
Others are shunning the idea of home ownership, even with the rock-bottom interest rates that have made it possible for buy property right out of college.

"I don't believe that my sense of being is dependent on what I own," says Ashley Mohney, a 24-year-old Chicagoan and avowed renter who works as a library clerk at a law firm. "I don't need a status symbol such as a house or property to feel complete or accomplished."

"That comes from my writing, playing guitar and good friends," says Mohney, an avid poetry and short-story writer outside of work.

I bet a nickle this girl just pines for Hillary to save us all from the evils of consumerism that private property ownership represents.

30 posted on 10/27/2003 9:25:50 PM PST by A Simple Soldier
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To: wheelgunguru
Gag, puke.

I quit school at 13 and went to work, at 15 I lied about my age and was working as an adult on a dredge boat building the levee around Lake Okeechobee, Florida.

When I turned 17 I went into the army, and the first thing I did was make out a $50.00 a month allotment (this when my monthly pay as a buck private was $69.00 a month) to my single mother with four younger siblings to support and feed. Many of the guys in my army outfits back in the 1950's were doing the same thing. why? Because as a responsible person, it was the right thing to do.

There was nothing unusual about this for many boys, when you turned 17 you went into military service and got it over with. You helped your family when they needed it and you could. You came out a man, you got married, started a family of your own and built a life for them that was better that the one you had as a kid.

If you want kids to grow up, give them stark responsibilities to face and they will rise to the occasion. Look at our wonderful young men and women who served in the recent Iraqi combat, and they now have the damn disagreeable job of some fighting and dying in the resulting terrorist war. They were given a deadly responsibility and a reason for accepting it, they did, and they are. May G_D bless them one and all and look over them.

I have no respect for whiny over educated 20 something's sucking on the sugar tit at home with momma and poppa because the world was not delivered to their delicate feet on a silver platter. Get out, root wild hog or die.
31 posted on 10/27/2003 9:29:10 PM PST by Ursus arctos horribilis ("It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees!" Emiliano Zapata 1879-1919)
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To: LonghornFreeper
I'm married 23, working for a bank, and hoping to buy a house within the next year or two.
32 posted on 10/27/2003 9:52:27 PM PST by Keyes2000mt (Pray for Rush)
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