Ponderings

On Being an Adult

I turned 21 a couple months ago.

Was I excited? Sure. But it quickly subsided into a kind of ho-hum feeling, not negative, just indifferent.

Up until that point, I felt perpetually 17. Prior to 17, I think I always felt myself so old, so mature. After 17, I felt enormously incapable of being deemed “an adult.” I was repulsed by any “adult” activity and, upon encountering any such activities (traffic, filling out forms, etc.), would just mutter, “God, I hate being an adult.”

These feelings only grew in size last year when I turned 20, but instead of repulsion, they turned to panic. Two decades of my life, done. Like that. How fast would the next two decades pass? In despair, I remember donning my favorite pair of socks that say “Dang it all to heck,” slipping on my Asics, and tearing out the door on my 20th birthday. I then proceeded to run 5 miles, crying, while listening to Bad Suns’ “20 Years,” among their numerous existential songs. Not a shining moment.

Since that angsty run, I seemed to come to terms with being 20, but I didn’t stop bitching about being an adult and I was encountering irritating adult inconveniences more and more frequently. At some point, someone said to me, with exasperation, “You know, you really need to get over this fear of being an adult.”

I sat in silence. It wasn’t that I was afraid of being an adult. I just found the whole thing tedious. Annoying. That somehow, I didn’t deserve it, that I was still 17, for God’s sake, too young to handle it all.

And now I’m 21, and I feel utterly ageless. I was recently in Cuba, visiting my host family and friends from my study abroad there. My host grandparents, Angelita and Silvino, couldn’t stop remarking how young I was. They kept referring to me as the jovencita, the young little girl. At one point, I decided to get a pedicure in Old Havana. The tiny shop was empty, but for the two young Cuban women running it. We gabbed in Spanish about inane things, and they too couldn’t believe how young I was. At age 28 and 29, they both had done so much more than I had, had endured far more hardships than I could imagine.

It was at that point that I quite possibly felt exactly like my age. Like I was 21 and had seen what a 21 year old has seen, but that I had so much more ahead of me. Then again, I felt like I had no age at all. I realized that I am capable of handling myself, but beyond that, I’m not sure. I don’t feel too young to deal with things, nor do I feel competent to do it all myself.

For now, I’ve decided that age in general just bores me. Beyond 21, numbers are no real concern. So I’ll carry on, and most likely, I’ll continue to mutter that I hate being an adult. But it won’t be out of feeling too young to be an adult; it’ll be out of the fact that being an adult, sometimes, frankly sucks. No matter your age.

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January 5, 2018

Yikes.

January 13, 2018

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