Amanda

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It takes longer for each successive generation to finish school, become financially independent, get married, and have children. A large-scale national study conducted since the late 1970s found that today’s twenty-five-year-olds, compared with their parents’ generation at the same age, are twice as likely to still be in school, 50 percent more likely to be taking money from their parents, and only half as likely to have a spouse.
Late Bloomers: The Power of Patience in a World Obsessed with Early Achievement
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