Why 30 is not the new 20 | Meg Jay

a english material from Great Big Story

Clinical psychologist Meg Jay has a bold message for twentysomethings: Contrary to popular belief, your 20s are not a throwaway decade. In this provocative talk, Jay says that just because marriage, work and kids are happening later in life, doesn’t mean you can’t start planning now. She gives 3 pieces of advice for how twentysomethings can re-claim adulthood in the defining decade of their lives.

   
psychotherapy  
psychology  
slouchy  
couch  
flat  
relieve  
arsonist  
nod  
supervisor  
knucklehead  
downtime  
benign  
neglect  
population  
adulthood  
specialize  
sociologist  
neurologist  
fertility  
transformative  
opinion  
defining moment  
take place  
panic  
crowd  
exponential  
spurt  
rewire  
tricky  
attachment  
ordinary  
timetable  
adolescence  
extended  
coin  
trivialize  
rob  
urgency  
ambition  
flip  
stake  
enormous  
incompatible  
entertainment  
temper  
hysterical  
wreck  
therapist  
parade  
beget  
internship  
startup  
exploration  
procrastination  
urban  
tribe  
overrate  
intentional  
consciously  
museum  
is bound for  
enormous  
privilege  
claim  

Article

When I was in my 20s,

I saw my very first psychotherapy client.

I was a Ph.D. student in clinical psychology at Berkeley.

She was a 26-year-old woman named Alex.

Now Alex walked into her first session wearing jeans and a big slouchy top,

and she dropped onto the couch in my office

and kicked off her flats

and told me she was there to talk about guy problems.

Now when I heard this, I was so relieved.

My classmate got an arsonist for her first client.

(Laughter)

And I got a twentysomething who wanted to talk about boys.

This I thought I could handle.

But I didn’t handle it.

With the funny stories that Alex would bring to session,

it was easy for me just to nod my head

while we kicked the can down the road.

“Thirty’s the new 20,” Alex would say,

and as far as I could tell, she was right.

Work happened later, marriage happened later,

kids happened later, even death happened later.

Twentysomethings like Alex and I had nothing but time.

But before long, my supervisor pushed me to push Alex about her love life.

I pushed back.

I said, “Sure, she’s dating down,

she’s sleeping with a knucklehead,

but it’s not like she’s going to marry the guy.”

And then my supervisor said,

“Not yet, but she might marry the next one.

Besides, the best time to work on Alex’s marriage

is before she has one.”

That’s what psychologists call an “Aha!” moment.

That was the moment I realized, 30 is not the new 20.

Yes, people settle down later than they used to,

but that didn’t make Alex’s 20s a developmental downtime.

That made Alex’s 20s a developmental sweet spot,

and we were sitting there, blowing it.

That was when I realized that this sort of benign neglect

was a real problem, and it had real consequences,

not just for Alex and her love life

but for the careers and the families and the futures

of twentysomethings everywhere.

There are 50 million twentysomethings in the United States right now.

We’re talking about 15 percent of the population,

or 100 percent if you consider

that no one’s getting through adulthood without going through their 20s first.

(Laughter)


Raise your hand if you’re in your 20s.

I really want to see some twentysomethings here.

Oh, yay! You are all awesome.

If you work with twentysomethings, you love a twentysomething,

you’re losing sleep over twentysomethings, I want to see —

Okay. Awesome, twentysomethings really matter.

So, I specialize in twentysomethings because I believe

that every single one of those 50 million twentysomethings

deserves to know what psychologists,

sociologists, neurologists and fertility specialists

already know:

that claiming your 20s is one of the simplest,

yet most transformative, things you can do

for work, for love, for your happiness,

maybe even for the world.

This is not my opinion.

These are the facts.

We know that 80 percent of life’s most defining moments

take place by age 35.

That means that eight out of 10

of the decisions and experiences and “Aha!” moments

that make your life what it is

will have happened by your mid-30s.

People who are over 40, don’t panic.

This crowd is going to be fine, I think.

We know that the first 10 years of a career

has an exponential impact on how much money you’re going to earn.

We know that more than half of Americans

are married or are living with or dating their future partner by 30.

We know that the brain caps off

its second and last growth spurt in your 20s

as it rewires itself for adulthood,

which means that whatever it is you want to change about yourself,

now is the time to change it.

We know that personality changes more during your 20s

than at any other time in life,

and we know that female fertility peaks at age 28,

and things get tricky after age 35.

So your 20s are the time to educate yourself

about your body and your options.

So when we think about child development,

we all know that the first five years are a critical period

for language and attachment in the brain.

It’s a time when your ordinary, day-to-day life

has an inordinate impact on who you will become.

But what we hear less about is that there’s such a thing

as adult development,

and our 20s are that critical period of adult development.

But this isn’t what twentysomethings are hearing.


Newspapers talk about the changing timetable of adulthood.

Researchers call the 20s an extended adolescence.

Journalists coin silly nicknames for twentysomethings

like “twixters” and “kidults.”

(Laughing) It’s true!

As a culture, we have trivialized

what is actually the defining decade of adulthood.

Leonard Bernstein said that to achieve great things,

you need a plan and not quite enough time.

(Laughing) Isn’t that true?

So what do you think happens

when you pat a twentysomething on the head and you say,

“You have 10 extra years to start your life”?

Nothing happens.

You have robbed that person of his urgency and ambition,

and absolutely nothing happens.

And then every day, smart, interesting twentysomethings

like you or like your sons and daughters

come into my office and say things like this:

“I know my boyfriend’s no good for me,

but this relationship doesn’t count. I’m just killing time.”

Or they say, “Everybody says as long as I get started

on a career by the time I’m 30, I’ll be fine.”

But then it starts to sound like this:

“My 20s are almost over, and I have nothing to show for myself.

I had a better résumé the day after I graduated from college.”

And then it starts to sound like this:

“Dating in my 20s was like musical chairs.

Everybody was running around and having fun,

but then sometime around 30 it was like the music turned off

and everybody started sitting down.

I didn’t want to be the only one left standing up,

so sometimes I think I married my husband

because he was the closest chair to me at 30.”

Where are the twentysomethings here?

Do not do that.

(Laughter)

Okay, now that sounds a little flip, but make no mistake,

the stakes are very high.

When a lot has been pushed to your 30s,

there is enormous thirtysomething pressure

to jump-start a career, pick a city, partner up,

and have two or three kids in a much shorter period of time.

Many of these things are incompatible,

and as research is just starting to show,

simply harder and more stressful to do all at once in our 30s.

The post-millennial midlife crisis isn’t buying a red sports car.

It’s realizing you can’t have that career you now want.

It’s realizing you can’t have that child you now want,

or you can’t give your child a sibling.

Too many thirtysomethings and fortysomethings

look at themselves, and at me, sitting across the room,

and say about their 20s,

“What was I doing? What was I thinking?”

I want to change what twentysomethings are doing and thinking.


Here’s a story about how that can go.

It’s a story about a woman named Emma.

At 25, Emma came to my office

because she was, in her words, having an identity crisis.

She said she thought she might like to work in art or entertainment,

but she hadn’t decided yet,

so she’d spent the last few years waiting tables instead.

Because it was cheaper, she lived with a boyfriend

who displayed his temper more than his ambition.

And as hard as her 20s were,

her early life had been even harder.

She often cried in our sessions,

but then would collect herself by saying,

“You can’t pick your family, but you can pick your friends.”

Well one day, Emma comes in and she hangs her head in her lap,

and she sobbed for most of the hour.

She’d just bought a new address book,

and she’d spent the morning filling in her many contacts,

but then she’d been left staring at that empty blank

that comes after the words

“In case of emergency, please call …”

She was nearly hysterical when she looked at me and said,

“Who’s going to be there for me if I get in a car wreck?

Who’s going to take care of me if I have cancer?”

Now in that moment, it took everything I had

not to say, “I will.”

But what Emma needed wasn’t some therapist who really, really cared.

Emma needed a better life, and I knew this was her chance.

I had learned too much since I first worked with Alex

to just sit there while Emma’s defining decade

went parading by.


So over the next weeks and months,

I told Emma three things

that every twentysomething, male or female,

deserves to hear.

First, I told Emma to forget about having an identity crisis

and get some identity capital.

By “get identity capital,”

I mean do something that adds value to who you are.

Do something that’s an investment

in who you might want to be next.

I didn’t know the future of Emma’s career,

and no one knows the future of work,

but I do know this:

Identity capital begets identity capital.

So now is the time for that cross-country job,

that internship, that startup you want to try.

I’m not discounting twentysomething exploration here,

but I am discounting exploration that’s not supposed to count,

which, by the way, is not exploration.

That’s procrastination.

I told Emma to explore work and make it count.

Second, I told Emma that the urban tribe is overrated.

Best friends are great for giving rides to the airport,

but twentysomethings who huddle together with like-minded peers

limit who they know,

what they know, how they think,

how they speak, and where they work.

That new piece of capital, that new person to date

almost always comes from outside the inner circle.

New things come from what are called our weak ties,

our friends of friends of friends.

So yes, half of twentysomethings are un- or under-employed.

But half aren’t,

and weak ties are how you get yourself into that group.

Half of new jobs are never posted,

so reaching out to your neighbor’s boss is how you get that unposted job.

It’s not cheating. It’s the science of how information spreads.

Last but not least, Emma believed

that you can’t pick your family, but you can pick your friends.

Now this was true for her growing up,

but as a twentysomething, soon Emma would pick her family

when she partnered with someone and created a family of her own.

I told Emma the time to start picking your family is now.

Now you may be thinking that 30 is actually a better time to settle down

than 20, or even 25,

and I agree with you.

But grabbing whoever you’re living with or sleeping with

when everyone on Facebook starts walking down the aisle

is not progress.

The best time to work on your marriage is before you have one,

and that means being as intentional with love

as you are with work.

Picking your family is about consciously choosing

who and what you want

rather than just making it work or killing time

with whoever happens to be choosing you.


So what happened to Emma?

Well, we went through that address book,

and she found an old roommate’s cousin

who worked at an art museum in another state.

That weak tie helped her get a job there.

That job offer gave her the reason to leave that live-in boyfriend.

Now, five years later, she’s a special events planner for museums.

She’s married to a man she mindfully chose.

She loves her new career, she loves her new family,

and she sent me a card that said,

“Now the emergency contact blanks

don’t seem big enough.”

Now Emma’s story made that sound easy,

but that’s what I love about working with twentysomethings.

They are so easy to help.

Twentysomethings are like airplanes just leaving LAX,

bound for somewhere west.

Right after takeoff, a slight change in course

is the difference between landing in Alaska or Fiji.

Likewise, at 21 or 25 or even 29,

one good conversation, one good break,

one good TED Talk, can have an enormous effect

across years and even generations to come.

So here’s an idea worth spreading

to every twentysomething you know.

It’s as simple as what I learned to say to Alex.

It’s what I now have the privilege

of saying to twentysomethings like Emma every single day:

Thirty is not the new 20, so claim your adulthood,

get some identity capital, use your weak ties,

pick your family.

Don’t be defined by what you didn’t know

or didn’t do.

You’re deciding your life right now.

Thank you.

(Applause)

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