30 Scientific Ways Your Childhood Affects Your Success As An Adult Analysis

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Experience Matters During vacation to Spider Lake in Wisconsin, the Bachmann family met some friends for dinner. During that dinner, the Bachmann’s son, John, found his life changed forever by a conversation over dinner with friends. Working at the furniture store with his dad was nice and all, but he got bored quite easily and wanted a fun, new experience of his own. Coincidentally, during this conversation, the family friends suggested Camp Highlands. It was a camp they wished their son had attended, but they did not discover it until their son was too old. Maybe it would be a perfect fit for my grandpa who was an energetic and driven youngster. Camp Highlands seemed to be the ticket he needed in order to do that. “And to think if …show more content…

In “30 Scientific Ways Your Childhood Affects Your Success as an Adult” by Rachel Gillett, the author outlines several childhood influences that impact a person as an adult. Many of these support the concept that formative memories do make a person stronger. In my grandfather’s case, many of these go hand in hand. Gillett goes on to tell us that, the two-decade study revealed, “socially competent children who could cooperate with their peers without prompting, be helpful to others, understand their feelings, and resolve problems on their own were far more likely to earn a college degree and have a full-time job by age 25 than those with limited social skills” (Gillett).The social skills Gillett mentions include talking and hanging out with other people. Perfecting these skills will help when one gets older and goes out looking for a new job. Social skills can help one answer questions in job interviews, and once a person gets the job, it can help him interact with his co-workers, boss, and …show more content…

The article states, “The first study, published Thursday in Child Development, found that the type of emotional support that a child receives during the first three and a half years has an effect on education, social life and romantic relationships even 20 or 30 years later.” Singh states that emotional support in ones’ early years affects education and relationships much later on. For my grandfather, he had a fulfilling life growing up and a career he loved. He was given emotional support which lead to success. When I asked him what he attributes his success to he said, “My success was because of my mom who believed in me, my granddad who taught me about investing, my business predecessor that brought me into Edward Jones, and of course the values learned at Camp Highlands.” Most early childhood experiences shape a person’s future. People can turn into what society makes them believe they are, but they also can create their own success based on what they