king_of_mayo wrote: » Do you think Irish people mature too late in life?
Ficheall wrote: » I'm confused.. spraying champagne all over each other was a sign of their maturity?
freshpopcorn wrote: » Irish people never mature until the get rid of there doorbell!
facehugger99 wrote: » Make a video of you and your team pouring pints of Guinness over each other - that'll show them.
Deleted User wrote: » A lot of people don't mature at all these days.. There are actually men in their 50s making tiktok videos.. We are in the age of the eternal teenager..
Deleted User wrote: » *Their*
All that fandango wrote: » I've noticed this too, we must be the last crowd out of plenty of nationalities to get married, have kids and settle down. Many are at this stage already by the time they are mid to late 20s.
king_of_mayo wrote: » They knew how to play the game and get the glory.
king_of_mayo wrote: » I knew a lad who worked in the City of London, as a starting out dev. He told me that one of the best things he ever did was show up on March 17th with a big stupid Paddy green hat on and brought in some Irish-y cakes and stuff for everyone to have in the kitchen. He smiled and went through it, and is now on a very nice contractor rate as he's well known as the mad Irish lad. Who do you think is getting a call up, him or Johnny-keep-the-head-down?
chosen1 wrote: » Many nationalities are on their first or second divorce by the age of the Irish average marriage age. Our divorce rate is a fraction of most other countries and marying late may have some input in this.
king_of_mayo wrote: » They effectively got all the glory and we never saw it coming.
Capra wrote: » Maslow's hierarchy of needs lists recognition as one element of the need for esteem. Surely you have learned by now that everyone craves recognition of some sort?
Potential-Monke wrote: » I too cannot follow the initial post, but I do like this idea of 'maturity'. It's not something one can just do, nor should there be expectations of what maturing is. I actually feel sorry for those who look on at others and think they're immature, because they're enjoying themselves at an age where the person mentioning it is probably jealous of the fun they're having, while they have 'matured' and are shit craic. Looking back at my own life (and the right old age of 37 now), I would have been considered matured in my 20's. Good (perceived) job, mortgage, long relationship, possibility of having kids (if I wanted them). But I was miserable (took me a while to figure it out). Have since left the good (perceived) job, sold the house and took the negative equity, broke up with the girlfriend (she wanted kids, so best thing to do for her). Moved home. Now, looking at my life from the outside, a single man in his late 30's living with his 2 70+ year old parents in their house, spends most time gaming, smoking weed if it can be got, playing D&D with mates pre-covid, watching anime and films and tv series not based on reality, one would say I could be immature. And so be it. I'm happier now than I was for most of my 20's. And if you consider it immature, then I genuinely think you're just feeling jealousy because I'm doing what I want to do and not conforming to the (to me) soul destroying life of marriage, kids, mortgage and all the boring stuff that comes with that. If I win the lotto, I'm touring the world, not to see the sights, but to go to every (safe) themepark in the world. I would blog it/YT/whatever, make a series for it. Again, could be considered immature, but why? I work, contribute to society (always have, never been unemployed, sometimes had 3 jobs), I don't harm anyone or anything with my actions (weed sources were direct from suppliers/growers in legal countries). One of the lads I play D&D with just had a child, at 26 with his 25yo girlfriend. He did intend to have one, but not for another good few years, and while he has that expected "once I saw her, everything changed" mentality (although I fail to see it myself, it's something that needs to be experienced I believe, no thanks), he is already exhausted (she's 6 days old) and has no intention of having any more. That, to me, sounds like the end of my life! But one would consider it maturity to become a father. I dunno, like most things it's subjective. I don't consider all the above expected life to be maturity. What even is maturity? Let people have fun and do crazy stuff into their 90's if they want, and don't be jealous of others enjoying their life their own way, stop labelling it as immature unless they're harming others in their pursuits of fun, and even then I may not consider it immature, could just be dickishness.