Week 6-Early and Middle Adulthood
This week we
read chapters 9 and 10 which dealt with early and middle adulthood. One would think that with most of us at this
stage of life these chapters would be a piece of cake to understand and relate. I will admit there were things that I did not
realize that happen at this stage of life and development. Then there were things that happen in the
middle adulthood that I remember doing in the early stage. The first point I read that I focused on was
achieved identity. I agree that my self
is based on my effort and commitment. I
feel if I do not put forth good effort into anything then I am not happy with
myself. I was very interested in the
effect of lifestyle on health. I knew
that obesity has become huge issue and poor diet and nutrition is to partly to
blame. I will be the first to say that I
did not have the best diet growing up and in turn let myself become
overweight. I would agree with the book
when it says at it becomes harder to lose weight in the middle adulthood. I think my body has been in middle adulthood
for awhile because it has been hard to lose weight for many years. The reading also talks about social
development and the importance in early adulthood. I feel it is really important because a lot
of your long-term friends are met in college and early adulthood. This is also where we develop our own
personality based our own behavior. I
remember this is the time my personality and decisions were made by how I lived
my life and not by how I was raised. The
validation section was interesting to me because right now my fiancée and I are
seeing a counselor and we were just talking about validation. We have not validating each other’s
feelings lately. It was nice to read
this at this moment. It has helped.
Next, we
moved on to the middle adulthood and I started realizing I am moving more into
middle adulthood. The hearing loss
section hit close to home for me. I have
recently realized it has been harder for me to hear certain things. I can admit has been the use of earbuds for
many years. I usually had the volume up
too loud also. I feel I am lucky because
I do not think my intelligence has diminished much yet. I think that my creativity has been the key
of me retaining intelligence. I have
been creative for years so I think that is why it has helped. I think the idea of me going back to school
to become a teacher is a fine example of a midlife transition. I really have not felt satisfied with my life
professionally for the last few years. I
also do not feel that I have made much a difference so far so need a
change. The final section that I enjoyed
reading and related to was the coping with stress section. Like the reading displays on page 250, while
adults have more control over their lives they experience more stress overload. I have a lot of things causing stress and I
have problems sometimes to cope with it in a positive way. I just know even though I am in adulthood
there is a lot I need to still learn about.
Hi Corey. I have also been somewhat unsatisfied with my professional life for several years. I liked aspects of my work, but something was missing. I tried different things, started taking classes, tried a totally different job, and I ended up pursuing a career in teaching. Looking back, it all makes sense, but at times, I felt like nothing went according to plan. The life experiences prepared me for this moment, and I realize that all of it is part of my identity.
ReplyDeleteHey Corey! Thank you for sharing part of your journey with us. I am happy to hear you are changing your profession. I heard something the other day that really hit home. It was a video about how people look so forward to Friday evening through Sunday night and hate Monday thru Friday morning. I think a big part of that has to do with our jobs. We need to find something we love to do, and by changing your profession will lead you to loving Monday-Friday.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy the ride of life!