Maturity in all its forms
Maturity in all its forms
by Katja Miles
I find maturity an interesting concept to think about, considering I have often been placed in both categories of maturity and immaturity by the world around me.
Historically, humans saw it in a very literal sense, which followed the natural cycle of nature: when one is biologically mature, they were viewed as an adult, thus putting them in adult situations was common and regarded as normal. They married; had babies; ruled over man and beast; and provided the bread and butter (literally sometimes).
As time aged, so did human thinking: biological maturity is mostly thought as ONE of the signs of one’s developmental stage into adulthood, rather than THE sign of adulthood.
There is also the legality of being an adult: having independence in all or some of its attached factors, such as voting, smoking/drinking; and military service.
Maturity is the expert in life's rational thinking. It has a calm, quiet; and serene quality about it that sees compromising as a goal everyone should strive for in life.
While…
Immaturity is considered rather childlike in its nature: wild and free, with a range of dramatic temperaments and dependency/codependency survival instincts that frame its consistency.
How do you view maturity?