Thursday, May 21, 2020
The language of a quarter-life crisis
The language of a quarter-life crisis Oh how us twentysomethings love labels. Like a âquarter-life crisisâ for instance, we love to use this phrase to describe the uncertain and anxiety filled existence that is our twenties. But how can we tell if weâre actually having one? How are we supposed to feel? For a while I thought a quarter-life crisis was just the grown up version of how we felt when we were thirteen and werenât invited to certain parties and constantly compared bra sizes with our friends. Replace parties with job opportunities and bra sizes with success and boyfriends, and you got yourself all the ingredients for a good old fashion quarter-life crisis. I wonât lie. I donât think Iâm going through a crisis right now, but a few weeks ago my boyfriend used the term when describing his current life and career qualms to me, and it got me thinking. I was hearing a lot of âshouldsâ from him: âAm I doing what Iâm supposed to be doing?â or âI should be further along in my career, shouldnât I?â I must admit I too have had those conversations with myself and Iâm only 23. Frankly, I believe we start thinking this way the minute we step off stage at graduation. I always thought it was normal until I heard someone say it out loud. âShouldâ is the language of a quarter-life crisis. Now donât get me wrong, Iâm not saying every twentysomething whoâs using this word is having a life crisis. Iâm not even sure my boyfriend is having one. I just think itâs a word that could fuel it. If youâre comparing yourself to your friends or even your own ambition for that matter, itâs easy to get wrapped up in what you think you should be doing. If I had a quarter for every time I stalked LinkedIn to find out about a peerâs new job or spent more than a couple minutes trying to guess a friendâs salary, I would have enough change for a year of laundry. The reality is Iâm not living their life. Iâm living mine. And my guess is those people Iâm comparing myself with are probably doing the exact same thing. So what does this all mean? It was weird for me to hear my boyfriend talk about how behind he felt, how he felt his accomplishments thus far didnât matter cause heâs not were he thought he should be. I couldnât believe how someone so talented in my eyes didnât recognize their potential. I knew I was catching him in a rare sensitive guy moment and would be a fool to shout âare you crazy?!â, so instead I channeled my inner Dr. Meg Jay (author of The Defining Decade, if you havenât read it, run to the bookstore) and told him: âthe only person keeping tabs on you is you.â Most of our compulsive need to compare and âstay ahead of the packâ comes from this idea that other people are keeping track of us. The only person who really knows how happy you are or how successful you are, is you. So instead of thinking about what you should do, consider what you want. I now think about how all my boyfriendâs âshould statementsâ can be redesigned into questions that actually spark some positive forward momentum. For example: This: âI should be at a job I love.â Becomes: âAm I happy doing what Iâm doing? If not, how do I change it?â This:âI should be making x amount by now.â Becomes: âWhat salary is really realistic for me right now based on my experience, and what steps do I need to take to make what I want to make?â This: âI should be going on some type of adventure in my twenties, everyone else is doing it.â Becomes: âWhat exactly do I want to do? What does my adventure look like and how can I make it happen?â Suffice to say Iâve edited myself a lot the last few weeks trying to avoid the âshould statementsâ. However changing your language is just the first step. If you can change the way you think, well now youâre definitely buying yourself some time on a life crisis.
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