While your best friends provide support, it’s your "weak ties"—the acquaintances, former coworkers, or friends of friends—who usually change your life. They offer access to new information and social circles that your tight-knit group can’t.
But psychologist Dr. Meg Jay argues the opposite. Your 20s are a high-stakes period of exponential growth where the choices you make—or don’t make—shape the rest of your life. Here’s why this decade matters so much: The Defining Decade: Why Your Twenties Matter--...
We’ve all heard it: "Your twenties are for making mistakes" or "30 is the new 20." While your best friends provide support, it’s your
The frontal lobe (the brain’s center for planning and emotional regulation) undergoes its final major growth spurt in your 20s. It is the best time to "wire" your brain for the person you want to be. Waiting until your 30s to "get serious" means trying to change habits that have already begun to set. Meg Jay argues the opposite
In Meg Jay’s The Defining Decade , she argues that 80% of life’s most significant moments happen by age 35. Far from being a "throwaway" period, your twenties are the developmental sweet spot for building "identity capital."