Maturity is many things. It is the ability to base a judgment on the big picture, the long haul.
It means being able to resist the urge for immediate gratification and opt for the course of action that will pay off later.
One of the characteristics of the young is “I want it now.”
Grown-up people can wait.
Maturity
is perseverance–the ability to sweat out a project or a situation, in
spite of heavy opposition and discouraging setbacks, and stick with it
until it is finished.
The adult who is constantly changing friends
and changing mates is immature. He/she cannot stick it out because
he/she has not grown up.
Maturity is the ability to control anger
and settle differences without violence or destruction. The mature
person can face unpleasantness, frustration, discomfort and defeat
without collapsing or complaining. He/she knows he cannot have
everything his/her own way every time. He/she is able to defer to
circumstances, to other people-and to time. He/she knows when to
compromise and is not too proud to do so.
Maturity is humility. It
is being big enough to say, “I was wrong.” And, when he/she is right,
the mature person need not experience the satisfaction of saying, “I
told you so.”
Maturity is the ability to live up to your
responsibilities, and this means being dependable. It means keeping your
word. Dependability is the hallmark of integrity. Do you mean what you
say-and do you say what you mean? Unfortunately, the world is filled
with people who cannot be counted on. When you need them most, they are
among the missing. They never seem to come through in the clutches. They
break promises and substitute alibis for performance. They show up late
or not at all. They are confused and disorganized. Their lives are a
chaotic maze of broken promises, former friends, unfinished business and
good intentions that somehow never materialize. They are always a day
late and a dollar short.
Maturity
is the ability to make a decision and stand by it. Immature people
spend their lives exploring endless possibilities and then doing
nothing. Action requires courage. Without courage, little is
accomplished.
Maturity is the ability to harness your abilities
and your energies and do more than is expected. The mature person
refuses to settle for mediocrity. He/she would rather aim high and miss
the mark than low-and make it.
Maturity is the art of living in
peace with that which cannot be changed, the courage to change that
which should be changed, no matter what it takes, and the wisdom to know
the difference
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