FACTORS IN ADULT DEVELOPMENT
(Young Adult Through the Edler Years)
Adam Blatner,
M.D.
On another website, I
list some of the many, many factors that can be relevant in assessing
the emotional development of the young person. This webpage carries
that forward. Adulthood used to be a time when little attention was
given to further growth. One "grew up" and adulthood was merely the
application of what had been learned. Instead, we've become more
sharply aware of the extensive continuing challenges in adulthood, as
well as the potential for growth. Alas, many adults cope with their
challenges by carrying forward the subtle unconscious and conscious
decisions and character patterns formed earlier in their life. They
don't really evolve much in their consciousness. On the other hand,
increasing numbers do change deeply, reinvent themselves, overcome some
of their early tendencies and character patterns, make new decisions,
start fresh.
Alas, again, some rise, sink, and some don't rise much again. On the
other hand, others deal with their ups and downs by making deep
psychological and spiritual changes. Appreciating the many factors
involved here, let's go on to identify some of the kinds of themes
operating in adulthood.
I confess that this list is hardly exhaustive. I just dared to start
listing some things. If you want to email me with suggested additions
and revisions, you're welcome to do so. (If you want me to use your
name and I decide your suggestion worthy, let me know, give me
permission, and I will!).
The challenge is to get a sense of the sheer richness and variety of
life-lessons to be learned!
The following “topic headings” are deceptively simple. In fact,
when lived in life, they allude to rich stories that weave in many
elements of individuality, the individuality of key others in the
social network, and a rich texture of other elements. Rarely do these
elements emerge in isolation---often they are combined with other
themes, because, well, life is like that.
Some old friends, contacts, and family may argue against change. Other
allies or teachers or models emerge. Social networks are fluid and
re-form as roles shift. Often there are multiple sub-plots involved,
such as, for eample, a new spiritual direction mixed with a new
romance, etc.
Finding a Mate
Living together, sometimes with support (emotional or financial)
from parents
.. Sometimes against their wishes or with
their worries
Getting married and all that entails
– the politics of the wedding, relations of
the two sets of parents (and nowadays,
Possibly step-parents,
other parent-partners)
“Having Kids”
Chosen or accidental; decisions about birthing; issues about
pregancy
Challenges of new parenthood, overwhelmed or coping well
How many kids, conflicts between the parents, religious issues
Employment
Sometimes
one finds ones vocation (which is related to the Latin,
vocare, to be called). One studies and prepares for a career.
Post-graduate education can easily take one through early adulthood, to
the 30s.
Often one goes through a series of jobs. Some are
felt to be a major calling, and it falls through. Every time one is
laid off or fired, there is more deep turbulence than the term
suggests: why did it happen, what does it mean about me? Unemployment
is more than stressful---maybe even traumatic---but certainly it stirs
up lots of issues.
Sometimes there are strange turns, pleasant
opportunities, opening up into new ventures. Sometimes there are dead
ends and a good deal of pain, anger, and confusion associated with
relations with supervisors, their supervisors, peers, subordinates,
customers, and those in other roles. These are thick stories---that's
the point to be made here.
Sometimes there is a major shift in the type of
work, the field of endeavor. Why does that happen?
Parenting
What are the rules, how strict are the rules, what are the
consequences for breaking the rules, how consistent is the enforcement,
what is the emotional quality of enforcement (often parents agree on 2
or 3 of these but not on a 4th, so figuring out where the friction is
becomes a bit of a detective process.
The Continuing
Conflict Between Desire and Limits
We can’t afford it, or can we? Credit card debt, buying more
mortgage than you can afford; risk of loss
of home; savings or no-savings.
Money management and discussions, budget,
Changes in the financial situation, getting laid off, trouble
finding another job, or one with a
comparable income
Impact of either party losing a job
Finding Meaning
Finding roots. Church, genealogy, extended family, making
contacts. Ethnic history.
Finding purpose: church, new religions, spiritual quests,
changing religions
This is a very
big issue and should not be minimized!
Finding
Identity
Mid-life gender change, sexual orientation change, divorce and
re-marriage
Mid-life career change (possibly more than one)
Sabbaticals, pilgrimages, adventures to “find oneself”
Personal Development
Psychotherapy, personal growth programs (e.g., est, encounter
groups)
Support groups, self-help groups
New hobbies, activities
Re-Socialization
Letting go of old friends and acquaintances, building new networks
Moving, with every move involving a host of sub-themes:
- what to keep and what to sell or give away
- how to keep up connections with key others,
especially if they,
too, have moved away
- criteria for choice of new church, social
groups, etc. may change
- fresh start, disorientation
Mid-Life Crisis
Sexual: Seeking adventure; risking divorce; secrecy; getting
caught;
Becoming single. Some become promiscuous; others isolated
New “life” through car, plastic surgery...
Religious crisis,
philosophy. "Pain makes man think; thinking makes man wise; wisdom
makes life endurable."
Mood shifts, medicines, menopause,
Relations with
Relatives
Dealing with elderly parents as they become frail or senile
Dealing with mental illness, depression, other conditions in
adult children
Dealing with social problems in which the son or daughter is “in
denial”
Becoming caught up as their advocate
... and sometimes discovering they were lying
Dealing with their life choices that feel like disrespect for
your values, abandonment
your not respecting their values—they seem
tacky
their marrying out of their race, religion,
class
Relations with New
Relatives
In-law kids, their parents
Where do adult kids do their holidays,
feeling neglected, included, considered, not considered
Grandchildren, frequency of visits, feeling put upon with too
much “baby sitting”
Financial support as young adult kids go through their own life
challenges
Divorces, Addictions, etc.
Addictions
Discovering that one is addicted or habituated in this or that
way, severely or mildly
Alcohol, books, hoarding, other drugs,
doctors’ visits, news, shopping,
gambling, sex, work, any hobby,
television, golf,
Dealing with it, episodes of cleaning up, relapse, recovery again
Joining a recovery support group, AA, etc.,
dropping out, dropping back in
Illnesses
Coping with more or less easily fix-able conditions, increasing
in frequency
Eye disorders, glasses, surgery, hearing aids,
dental problems and dentures
Replacements of hips, knees, other organs
Cancer screening, low grade or chronic cancer
support programs (e.g., prostate)
Cancer treatment, recovery, relapse
Dealing with
medical establishment
Unclear diagnoses, different consultations,
confusing instructions
Toxicity from side effects of medications
Confusing options, this way or that...
elective possibilities
Culture Change
Increasing intensity and loudness of music, scene changes more
rapid in movies,
spicier foods, faster talking, more dialect in songs so
they can’t be understood,
sexuality more overt, language more laced with obscenity,
personal ornamentation more shocking (haircuts, tattoos,
pierce-ings, etc.)
Information Glut—beyond explosion—leading to “overchoice”
Varieties of subtle falling into burn-out
Seductions to do, have, be “more,” and limitations of organism to
do it all
Lack of support for putting limits on efforts, for saying “enough”
Ever-new versions of computers, new gadgets, complexities of
building-up
skills to master the latest gadgets
Pressure to joint this or that social media networks
Falling behind as to which celebrity is popular with the younger
crowd
Ageing
Retirement, role-meaning, welcome or resisted, what else to do?
Feelings of status loss, stereotypes about ageing
Sexual or romantic desireability, attractiveness issues
Erectile dysfunction, sexual activity
changes
Philosophy of life, reflections, sense of humor, temptation to
get grumpy
Dealing with Death
Of elderly parents, some peers and relatives
Of kids or grandkids
Thinking about one’s own mortality, making arrangements or
falling into denial
... and so
forth.
Other:
Some
disillusionments are neither always unpleasant or a bad thing—some
illusions that are let go of may not be that useful. Some of these
involve unrealistic standards or the hope that if only I would ... then
everything would be better----what I call the "Dingle-Derry Complex."
In a world that is changing at an
ever-increasing rate, "keeping up".has become impossible. It seemed
quite possible in the mid-20th century, and, indeed, there was a mild
moral imperative to do so. This is one of many deep changes in
expectations and standards occasioned by the massive expansion of
everything---information, sub-types of activities, fields of endeavor,
alternatives, etc.
Indeed, one of my coping maneuvers has blended with an interest: What
is all this about? How is the world’s changing making a difference in
my understanding of all this. (I see us on the cusp between the modern
and postmodern era and paradigm—which means that I think we need to
learn new ways to think. This gives me a sense of purpose. But I don’t
suppose my life is at all typical. On the other hand, considering all
the variables to be weighed, I doubt that many people have that luxury.
On the other hand, they seem to find satisfaction in many activities I
find boring. So I’m more sharply aware of the sheer range of interests
people have.
In my role as
psychiatrist (retired), though, I have done this exercise to remind
myself of the sheer complexity of people’s life stories. I suspect that
a good deal of what passes as anxiety and/or depression, or what
sustains addictions and drug abuse, are the pressures from the issues
mentioned above. In this era that tends to believe in conditions that
can be treated by medication, there is a diversion of attention away
from the manifold stresses of contemporary life.
I further
distrust most approaches to therapy that are based on their own
theories rather than taking stock of the full range of aforementioned
events and the challenge of trying to maintain a sense of orientation
and self-esteem in the face of our socio-cultural variables. I am
inclined to encourage students to be more sharply aware of all the
aforementioned pitfalls—and I suspect that this list is only a fraction
of the permutations and variations of issues that come up in life. The
purpose is to be suggestive rather than exhaustive, meaning that if you
think of some other factors that belong on this list, feel free to
email me with your suggestions and whether I can use your
corrections.
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