I mean I could come up with ruder words but past a certain point a bad take is just funny.
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hm, hold on your reaction suggest the number is not just off, it's far off I guess it would make perfect sense to define "midlife" such that it's centered around half the life expectancy, right? at least it wouldn't be a "bad take" so let's round it to 40…
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I mean honestly the take is pretty bad at any age point - I can't think of a single point in my life to date where I wouldn't be envious of my life as it is now - but the "midlife starts at 30" is just the icing on a beautiful young-people-having-terrible-opinions cake.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @mechanicalmonk1 and
I'd be fine with a labelling of "midlife" as like 30-50 or whatever (though I think traditionally midlife crises start after 40), but coupled to "everyone in midlife is lame" it becomes funny as hell.
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I see, I thought you were reacting to the number alone proceed
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I am a little bit. I think of 30 as the age when people start to have shit a bit more figured out and a lot of the interesting stuff really starts happening, so I'd be kinda reluctant to consider it midlife and would probably think of that as more like 40-60, but I care less.
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it seems common enough that people feel 'more boring' as they get older, right? not to mention biological decline possibly if one is very career/ambition inclined, or had signif psychological problems, 30+ can seem more interesting, but that isn't vast maj of people!
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Replying to @bigmastertroll @GeniesLoki and
for instance i feel a lot of the stuff that people mention to me about careers/goals feels trite and unromantic - an extension of youthful exam striving which at the time cooler people avoided bc it was tiresome - and now people care about these things!
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Replying to @bigmastertroll @GeniesLoki and
Emotions don't transfer well unless you share the lived experience. What is fulfilling to a participant can be boring to an observer. If you're interacting with someone who isn't prioritising for entertaining/impressing an audience, you won't be entertained/impressed.
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Replying to @fvathynevgl @bigmastertroll and
Example of shared lived experience: parents swapping parenting anecdotes (tedious for childless.) Shared social hierarchy is also important; you're not gonna be impressed unless you share the same values and/or understanding of what some achievement is "worth".
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Yeah. I think a lot of interesting things that happen as you get older are the sort of thing where you require a certain amount of domain expertise to really appreciate them? The other sort are those that just seem kinda impossible without adulthood mental/practical resources.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @bigmastertroll and
there's a tradeoff between novelty-seeking and investing in something that you've laid foundations for. so I can see the "people becoming more boring" side e.g. it's harder to get older people to socialise after work because they prefer to go home to partner/children
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Replying to @fvathynevgl @GeniesLoki and
This comes to mindhttps://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/58012/the-men-that-dont-fit-in …
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