^^ the no was to the 'are you off the hook' part, not the brain development part. |
*You are not* Well I’m still happily married, and have gone on to have a wonderful life. Sometimes you meet the right person early. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having kids in your 20s. |
|
The best part of the fact that their frontal lobe is not fully formed is that they make mistakes... lots of mistakes. They learn to deal with mistakes and that life has ups and fines.
The worst adults are those that have their 1 “down” at 50, they never learned to cope and have a nervous breakdown. |
You also have no sense of humor. Lighten up Francis. Getting married at 25 is not proof you made good decisions. Actually you probably made a shit ton of bad decisions just like every other 20-25 year old. Being “happily married” is also not proof you never made bad decision. Also it’s not proof your H didn’t make bad decisions behind your back that you never found out about. |
I never said I didn’t make one single bad decision, but no it certainly wasn’t a shit ton. Those were all good, responsible, adult decisions and you tried to portray them as negatives. The point is that 18-25 year olds are perfectly capable of responsible decision making. I do not think they should be off the hook because their brains are not fully developed. They are still adults. |
+1. “They aren’t fully developed” is just a bunch of psychobabble that the helicopter/snowplow set uses to make them feel better about themselves because they basically have their identity tied up in their kids and can’t bear the thought that the kid might not NEEEED them to come to the rescue for the rest of their adult lives. It’s a sick and twisted cop out with really poor results. |
DP. It's actually you who needs to lighten up. You sound utterly miserable. |
|
A person is an adult at age 18.
The brain changes throughout life. For example, we start to see declines in working memory as early as age 30. Our cerebral cortex thins as we age and synapse connections drop - and not just when we are all grey haired seniors. |
Exactly. The wording of this article is problematic. A 25 year old brain is not a teen's brain. |
| If this is so, why are parents pressuring kids to get into top colleges when they can’t emotionally, mentally tolerate it? I recently heard of a college student suicide, I’m heart broken. This coupled with the worlds mess, childhood is now limited to toddler years. Sad. |