Stages of Growth


Addressed with the right mindset, the following are stages
of personal growth. The movement through the stages is a progression. As
we pass from one stage to the next, often with some difficult periods of
transition, we learn and mature in the process. If we acknowledge and work
through the issues of each successive stage, we become better human and
spiritual beings.
The following stages carry us from our late teens to post retirement. The ages shown for each stage are only rough estimates. People may pass through the stages several years earlier or later than the estimates shown. Individuals vary widely in their progression through the stages.
Stage
1. Autonomy and Tentative Choices (Approximately 18-26)
In this stage we are typically developing personal autonomy and leaving
the family to establish an independent home, finances etc. We're developing
our own sense of personhood as separate from parents and childhood peer
groups. We try out new relationships (e.g., romantic interests, professional
associates, peer groups and friends). This is typically a period of tentative
or provisional commitments. We're comfortable there is plenty of time ahead
to change our minds on provisional decisions concerning things like location,
occupation, plans to marry or not marry, friends, key life values, etc.
Our focus is on defining ourselves as individuals and establishing an initial
life structure.
Stage
2. Young Adult Transition (Approximately 27-31)
This is usually a period of significant turmoil - of looking at who we are
becoming and asking if we're really journeying in directions we want to
go. We question most of our earlier tentative choices. Have we made the
right decisions? Are we running out of time for changing our decisions?
Are our decisions becoming permanent before we want them to? Do we really
want to make this location, career path or romantic relationship permanent?
Will we or will we not settle down and have a family? Is time running out?
Often with considerable angst similar to the better known mid-life crisis
we rethink our provisional decisions and maintain them or change them in
the process of making more permanent choices.
Stage
3. Making Commitments (Approximately 32-42)
This is typically a period of relative order and stability where we implement
and live the choices made in the young adult transition. We settle down
into deeper commitments involving work, family, church, our community ties
etc. We focus on accomplishment, becoming our own persons and generating
an inner sense of expertise and mastery of our professions. By now we have
a better developed and fairly well defined, though not usually final, dream
of what we want to achieve in life. We put significant energy into achieving
the dream.
Stage
4. Mid-Life Transition (Approximately 42-48)
This is the stage of mid-life questioning that's been discussed so much
in the popular press. Here we tend to question everything again. If we have
not achieved our dreams we wonder why not. Were they really the right dreams?
If we have achieved our dreams we look at what values we might have neglected
in their pursuit. Was it worth it? Either way we're probably disillusioned.
A period of reassessment and realignment usually takes place, including
recognition and re-balancing of key polarities , such as:
Immortality
vs. Mortality - While young people know better intellectually, emotionally
they seem to feel they are immortal. In mid-life we start to realize it
may be half over and we want to make the best of what remains. This typically
requires some revision of priorities and values - perhaps less emphasis
on values already achieved and more emphasis on those we have neglected.
Constructive
vs. Destructive - Up to mid-life, most of us fool ourselves that our
behavior has been constructive while we had to deal with others' destructive
behavior. In mid-life we get the uncomfortable insight that we have also
engaged in our share of destructive as well as constructive behavior. This
insight is painful but essential if we want to continue growing intellectually
and spiritually.
Nurturing
vs. Aggressive - Whether we have focused on aggressive (e.g., fast
track corporate careers) or nurturing (e.g., teaching, social work, or homemaking)
behavior to date, in mid-life we often want to re-balance. Some aggressive
corporate people want to spend more time nurturing with their families or
in socially oriented work, and some who have been in more service-oriented
nurturing careers want to pursue something more aggressive or financially
rewarding.
The experts stress that acknowledging the turmoil, experiencing the pain, and facing and resolving the polarities is essential for continued growth and satisfaction. Refusing to acknowledge or experience mid-life anxieties and questions - or at some unconscious level trying to go back and be twenty again is usually a sure way to get stuck and disgruntled in a way station.
Stage
5. Leaving a Legacy (Approximately 49-65)
The period after completion of the mid-life transition can be one of the
most productive of all stages. We are usually at the peak of our mature
abilities here. If the issues of the mid-life transition have been acknowledged
and addressed we can make our greatest possible contributions to others
and society. Here we can be less driven, less ego-centered, less compelled
to compete with and impress others. Instead we can focus on what really
matters to us, on developing younger people, on community with others, on
leaving some personal legacy that really makes things better for people
(whether it's recognized as our personal legacy or not), and on accomplishing
values that our maturity and greater spirituality tell us have the most
true meaning in the overall scheme of life.
Stage
6. Spiritual Denouement (Approximately 66 and Beyond)
This is the stage of tying things up, of completing the design of what we
want to become, of finalizing our growth and assessing/fine-tuning the persons
we have made of ourselves. This stage can go on for many years. It can be
hopeful or cynical depending on how realistically, humbly, and effectively
we have resolved (or now finally resolve) the issues faced in earlier stages.
We may move into this stage sooner or later depending on how rapidly we
have developed in earlier stages - how much we have moved beyond our narrow
selves. Here we come to grips with the ultimate limitations of life, ourselves
and mortality. We can look hopefully and unflinchingly at the ultimate meaning
of our life and the life of others in the larger context. We do the best
we can to pass whatever wisdom we have gained on to others. We accept others
for what they are, seeing them as growing like we are and part of humankind's
diversity. Our sense of community continually expands as we prepare for
survival of the spirit beyond our mortality.
Excerpt from YOUR SOUL AT WORK, by Nicholas W. Weiler in collaboration with Stephen C. Schoonover, M.D.,copyright© 2001 by Nicholas W. Weiler and Stephen C. Schoonover.
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