Rocket123 wrote:
When I in my mid-to-late teens, I remember my parents and others talking about being prepared for the “real world”. This concept really confused me. How was the world I perceived as a mid-to-late teen (not to mention as a child) different from the world that existed once I was “grown up”? At what point, will my perception of things change, so that I can then see what this “real world” actually is? Why would anyone have children, if this “real world” was so difficult to maneuver?
I had these same troubles distinguishing between a “boy” and a “man” – when precisely to I transform from one to another? Even at 51, I don’t think of myself as a “man” or an “adult”. Whenever someone refers to me as “Mr. Rocket”, I do a double-take. I don’t feel “grown up” enough to be thought of as “Mr.” anything.
My wife oftentimes makes comments that she has to take care of 3 children - my two teenage daughters and me.
I imagine that probably, it’s because I am so self-centered. I am not egotistical. I do not need to be the focus of attention. Or any of those things. But, I am quite self-absorbed. I don’t see other’s perspectives (I tend to hyper focus on the things that pre-occupy and/or worry me). So, even though I may look older and act older and be assumed to be an “adult”, I have a difficult time seeing myself as such.
And so, it’s along this line, that it seems almost impossible to “figure things out”. Because what exactly is it that I have to “figure out”?
Other than:
1) There is a reason why I am different from others
2) I cannot count on anyone to take care of me. I need to figure out how to survive by myself, so I am prepared if/when the worst happens.
Dude, you just explained somewhat of myself and my thought process...just that i am younger, have no spouce and lonely and have slightly more autistic behavior that I subconsciously do...good to know I'm somewhat not alone in how I think.