Why is growing up too fast bad




















But before you jump in feet-first, you need to stop and assess. Growing too quickly can be just as dangerous to your business as not growing at all. What are the dangers of rapid growth and how do you avoid them? Here are some of the pitfalls you need to avoid. As much as anything else, excessive growth has to do with your business outpacing your capacity to conceive of its size and scale. Brian suggests making sure you consult your accountant more often than just during tax season.

Cash flow mistakes are incredibly common, and a big reason why many small businesses fail. As your business grows, it can be easy to get to a place where your monthly expenses exceed your operating capital.

Some entrepreneurs think that if they take care of sales, then everything else will follow. This is an especially key insight when you make financial decisions: revenue is a useful metric, but you need to use all the information you have at your disposal. Getting bigger means that you need to get more organized. As your ranks grow and positions that were filled by individuals transform into teams of people, the need to stay organized becomes amplified.

And instead of making them bitter or lazy, they are better people today because of it. No childhood is perfect and there are a million different reasons just like there are a million different people as to why that is the case. Sometimes, kids are put in situations where they have to grow up faster than they should.

Some may see this as a bad thing or as an opportunity to blame the parents or caregivers. However, growing up fast and taking on adult responsibilities at a young age can be a very positive thing.

Becoming an adult at a younger age allows you time to mature and become comfortable with doing certain tasks before you are out on your own. Some of us understand that in order for life to run smoothly, we have to learn to cope by ourselves and take care of ourselves and others around us. We may not have had the easiest or the most fun childhood, but we learned some valuable lessons.

And we can be so thankful for that. Being faced with these kinds of situations can be rough on a child. We sometimes dwell on not having the easiest life or not having things other children had. But when we wipe all of that away, we are fortunate enough to have learned how to take care of ourselves and how to make it on our own without any help.

It gave us broad shoulders. We know how to be responsible and take care of ourselves and of others. We know how to deal with stress that inevitably comes with adulthood. If you had not been placed in the situation you were in would you know how to do the things you know how to do?

Would you be independent and comfortable with your independence? Probably not. Now that you can budget your month, pay your bills on time, manage your own apartment or house, work hard, get up on time, and help others. It all makes perfect sense. Sometimes the trials and struggles we face are a blessing in disguise. They make us stronger and more independent. Hogan, "is, 'My mom doesn't care what I do. She's never home.

She doesn't even know what I do. The loss of family life invariably expands the power of the peer group. By late elementary school, according to "Peer Power: Culture and Identity," a recent study by Patricia Adler with Peter Adler, boys understand that their popularity depends on "toughness, troublemaking, domination, coolness, and interpersonal bragging and sparring skills.

Both parental absence and the powerful peer group are intricately connected to the rise of a burgeoning tween market. Tweens began to catch the eye of marketers around the mids, when research found that more and more children this age were shopping for their own clothes, shoes, accessories, drugstore items—even for the family groceries.

Today's tween ads reflect this sensibility: Kids are on their own, goes the premise; flatter them as hip and aware almost-teens rather than out-of-it little kids—as independent, sophisticated consumers with their own language, music and fashion. Anyone who remembers high school will recall many of these dynamics. But it is important to recognize that the combination of isolation from adults, peer cruelty and fantasies of sophistication, though always a danger to the alienated teenager, is especially taxing to the fragile ego of the preadolescent.

With less life experience and less self-awareness, preadolescents have fewer internal resources to fall back on. Instead, they want to be like their friends. Tweens, far from being simply a marketing niche group, are the vanguard of a new, decultured generation, isolated from family and neighborhood, shrugged at by parents, dominated by peers, and delivered into the hands of a sexualized and status- and fad-crazed marketplace.

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