On Maturity
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Or...you can go play with a shovel. |
Kids today talk about how their parents told them they were mature...mature enough to play M-rated video games. Mature enough to be able to explain all the ins and outs of anything sexual. At a recent play date, one mom was recounting how a 6 and 8-year-old in her life were joking about some sexual concept she'd never even heard of, nor could wrap her mind around. Beyond the ridiculousness of the idea of a 6-year-old playing a video game designed for US soldiers to become desensitized to killing. Or, how ridiculous is it that the pre-schoolers were able to describe not only the birds and the bees like some ranch kid...but the kinky, freaky bees.
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There might be a theme. |
We're somehow on this race car track where we feel like we've got to race to adulthood. I did a lot of growing up early with young years working in commercial agriculture, firefighting, and the military...to say I've been around curse words is an understatement. Recently, I've heard kids...little, early elementary school kids, who curse like the proverbial sailors of yesteryear and are proud of their ability to do so. On the flip side, I've seen plenty of young men and women while I was teaching at our local community college who still viewed their 20-25 year old selves as "kid-dults" and wanted no part of anything that looked like "adulting" (read responsibility).
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Maturity comes with building blocks. |
In trying to reconcile these two concepts, the young who are racing to "be mature" and those old enough to know better who are shirking anything that looks like maturity, it seems like we, as a people are wanting to avoid the consequences (emotional, physical, financial, etc) while grabbing the benefits. In the "every-child-gets-a-trophy" mentality, we've raised a generation that feels entitled to the "winning" (even though we aren't allowed to keep score), without putting in the work. When we talk about maturity and how we "become mature" I think it's important to really get better, more intentional about defining the 5 Ws before we get to the H.
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Don't wish the years away. |
In other words, I think we owe it to our kids and coming generations to do a better job spelling out, perhaps selling the concepts of what is maturity (how to become responsible, delaying gratification, budgeting our resources, sacrificing for greater goods). We also need to do a better job with "why" being mature is a good thing ("if not you, then who" mentality of maturity in being part of the solution). Who/when/where all have a place to play in maturity - I've had friends who were ready for when/where much earlier or later than other friends. As we approach middle age, I've got friends who are still "hooking up" every weekend, living in a perpetual Peter Pan state. I've got other friends who are rocking it by embodying the citizen ethic of leaving our world better than they found it.
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The training wheels fall off too soon, even on their own time...don't hurry it. |
Maturity, hopefully for your family, like ours, isn't a race to see whose kid can watch their first R-rated movie ahead of their peers, play the most violent video game, or sleep with the most people as a teenager. Maturity is or should be, an equally yoked responsibility and privilege connection in our actions. Our goal, largely, as parents is to raise good adults who don't need us. When our kids are young, we're scaffolding everything, even their most basic needs. As they grow, hopefully, we're "leaving and cleaving," weaning them off of us as parents and helping them sprout their own independent wings. In making that journey, as your child shows "maturity" or responsibility in the little things, we can trust them with bigger things.
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You may need to make a path. |
This path has many milestones and waypoints along the way. Many of our preschoolers' friends (and particularly their parents) are shocked that our kids have helped with axes and chainsaws, have their own bows and arrows, or have climbed mountains far above their perceived age abilities. Most of those same parents will also talk about how they don't have enough time to teach their kids anything...while telling all about the streaming binge they just had and are caught up on all the recent "must-see" shows. As parents, it's our responsibility (and sacrifice) to help our kids understand and move toward maturity. In part, that's a constant setting of the example - not in doing "mature things" but being a mature person.
Often when we try to define maturity, it comes in the context of an age-based scale (18 to vote, 21 to drink, 13 to watch that particular movie, and so forth). It's also generally couched as an "opposite" of sort of a coin to "being fun." Both of these are generally untrue or at the very least, not a complete or accurate portrayal of maturity. As we talked, your kid (or you) might be ready far before or after someone else's kid...but as a friend said recently with a 2-year-old, "I'm not worried about it, I don't know any adults who are still wetting their pants and crawling around." The point is, we all generally can do "mature things," eventually, on those age-based markers...we only get to be "mature people" through intentional, proactive growth.
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Keep an eye on the horizon. |
This post was a bit all over the place...but hopefully, like all the rest of the content here, your wheels are turning as you noodle on what is maturity for you and your home. As you think about maturity and how it can be a good thing...or a bad thing as we define it, it's important for your family to create and own a definition. I want our children to grow up and be mature people who are able to hold down a steady job, raise their own awesome kids, live independently, and, generally be functional adults. I don't want to raise kids who "can do mature things" who are consumed with video games, R-rated movies, pornography, hitting the bottle or drugs, wearing trampy clothing, or any other thing out there that is so-called "mature." For us, maturity lives somewhere in the intersection of where consequences, choices, responsibility, and rewards all come together. Hopefully, you and yours can see that intersection from where you're heading (and steering) as a parent.
With you in the arena, from ours to yours...Happy Trails!
Call to Action:
- Pick out a few ways that your children are "too mature" and a few ways that they need to be "more mature" - right down a couple of action steps on moving the needle over the next month.
- 1 - ___________________
- 2 - ___________________
- 3 - ___________________
- Discussion: Consider what you/your family could/would/should (level of commitment) and start/stop/sustain (action)
Further Reading, Motivation, and References:
- Chris Ledoux, Slow Down