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Is there anybody who can provide Character Builder Series or literature for mature teens and adults?
Is there anybody who can provide Character Builder Series or literature for mature teens and adults, with how-to on effective character building of specific Character?
to me these are the available resources.
Why are mature teens perceived as innocent?
Does it seem to anyone else that teenagers who don't participate in drugs, alcohol, smoking, sex, and partying are perceived as innocent, pure, wholesome, naive, etc. by their peers, instead of mature and classy? Whereas, the teens who do participate in those things are considered mature and grown-up? What does showing skin have to do with maturity? I was always under the impression that it was defined by ethics, morals, and so on. Thoughts?
I completely agree with you. Keep in mind that a pretty large percentage of the teenage population falls under the "drugs and partying" part, so it is largely their perception that you are hearing. Truly mature people recognize what true maturity is, and no one else. Don't worry about other people's perceptions, as they indeed are only perceptions, and you know that you are mature.
What are some good paint colors for a mature teens room?
I want a mature but young modern colors for my bed room. It's like a loft
I think that lavender, light green, celestial blue, navy blue are nice mature colors...

that a look at this site:
rlhome.polo.com/rlhome/products/p…

I like "Light Sky", "Big Sur Blue", "Light Orchid", "Jamaica Green".

Hope you like it!
Hi I made my pre-order of my 3DS & which good games that you recommend are rated for Teens & Mature?
Hi this is going to be my first DS game since I'm a hardcore gamer for Xbox 360 & PS3. I never got into Mario or Zelda games since Nintendo only develops guys games. Is their any good Teens or Mature games for both DS & 3DS games besides Resident Evil,SSF4, & Metal Gear Solid? Thank you!
dead or alive? dynasty warriors?
Do teens mature faster when their homeschooled?
It's another question I have. This may not be the best way to go about asking them, but there's a theory going around that home-schooling causing young people to mature faster then the public school? Do you think this is true, or is the public school environment stiffling to an adolescent's maturity? Do dating and peer pressure play too much of a role?
It depends on the individual person and their home and/or school enconvironment, but I think as a general group, yes, homeschoolers do tend to mature faster than public schoolers. Of course that also would depend on how you define "mature". When I think of maturity, I think of the following.

-The ability to hold intelligent/appropriate conversations with those your age as well as those older and/or younger than you. Homeschoolers in general tend to posess this ability as they are not age-segregated for most of their life like public schoolers are and do interact on a daily basis with people of all ages, intelligence levels, etc. They learn to interact with adults as well as other guyren.

-The ability to take responsibility for themselves. Homeschoolers, in general, tend to learn this one a lot earlier than public schoolers do because frankly they're given more opportunity to learn it. In public school (and I've been there...didn't start homeschooling until highschool) everything is spoon fed to you. There's always someone holding your hand and telling you where to be, when to be there, what to bring with you, what to do with it, and how long to do it. Your schedule is made for you and there's always someone making sure you stick to it. You've got teachers checking and double checking that you're taking notes and studying the way they think you should whereas in college your professor will just tell you what needs to be done when and expect you to do it. You've got people reminding you constantly to check your grades, turn in forms, meet deadlines, and if you aren't on top of it they call your parents, bypassing you entirely. And then so much is done for you behind closed doors in the administration office. I know public schoolers who didn't even know how to calculate their GPA or what graduation requirements in their state were, and they were in 12th grade! It had all just been taken care of for them. I also knew a homeschooler who only started homeschooling in her 11th grade year and went right back to public school because, as she put it, "it was too much work. Why do all that when regular school will do it for you?"

When you're homeschooled, yes, you still have a lot of guidance from your parents, teachers and professionals in the community, etc... But things USUALLY aren't just spoon fed to you. You learn a lot about setting and achieving your own goals, figuring out what's expected or required of you anad how you can achieve it, meeting deadlines without the constant reminder from teacher or phone call home, managing your time so that you can get things done and still have time for fun things you just want to do, prioritizing and deciding what's most important to you and what you can do without, and just generally surviving the REAL world, not the heavily regulated, artificial school world.

- The ability to understand and deal with both your own and others' emotions. Studies have shown that homeschoolers tend to be emotionally advanced and therefore better able to adjust to and cope with the stressed of adult life. People say that homeschoolers are "sheltered" because they don't deal with the "drama" that takes place in public schools, but anyone who thinks gossip about who kissed whose girlfriend under the bleachers at the last football game, who called whom a slut behind their back, and who you shouldn't hang out with because they buy their clothes at walmart is drama... well, that person hasn't spent enough time outside of school and in the real world to know what real drama is. Of course homeschoolers understand and have likely dealt with situations like these, but most homeschoolers also realize how insignificent they are compared to real world issues. I doubt a homeschooler would lose much sleep over typical highschool drama, but that doesn't mean they can't empathize with someone who's having a hard time.

- The ability to cooperate with others and work as a team, whether you like your team mates or not. Well, homeschoolers may not necessarily have the upper hand here, but they are at the very least even with public schoolers. Between team sports, co-op classes (groups of homeschoolers who study a particular subject or several together as a class), drama clubs, academic teams, robotics teams, camp activities, leadership programs, OM, volunteer groups, and so on... homeschoolers get just as much opportunity to practice working as a team with a wide variety of individuals as public schoolers get.. Possibly more since for a number of things, homeschoolers might ave to seek out and form their own teams. I myself recently realized that our local homeschool group didn't have a yearbook club, so... I started one. I put up flyers and found a few other homeschooled highschoolers that I didn't know as well as some adults in the community (a librarian who could get us space in the library's meeting room, a techie who could get us the software we need, a parent who could organize a fund raiser with us) and we started getting things organized and signing guys up... guys of ALL ages, some we were friends with and some we didn't like, and we've done some great things together. And homeschoolers form their own Odyssey of the Mind teams or teams to enter the Science and Invention fair together, and even more forming fencing teams or People to People International chapters. There's no lack of teamwork in homeschooling.

- The ability to plan ahead. Homeschoolers are usually very good at planning for upcomming events, and they usually have a pretty good idea of where they want to go in life and how to get there.

- The ability to see yourself as an individual. That's something I KNOW homeschoolers are typically better at than public schoolers. When you're homeschooled, you usually develop a really strong sense of self. You know how to be yourself and think for yourself, and you do it with confidence. Yes, you have friends. Yes, you have an active social life. You've got clubs and activities, field trips and social events in the community and with the homeschool group you'r in. You've got prom and sports and homecomming and friends you just hang out with casually, but you ARE NOT (usually) peer dependent. You don't have that overwhelming need to fit into some clique or group that public schoolers seem to have programmed into them. You don't worry all the time about what other people are thinking or saying about you, or what everone else thinks is cool and if it differs from what you think is cool, so you don't give in nearly as easily (if at all) to peer pressure. Most homeschoolers are individual, free thinkers who know how to socialize with their peers without being dependent on them.

If this is the criteria you use to determine if someone is mature then yes, I'd say that homeschooling does a lot to help guys mature faster.


Oh, and on a side note... just wanted to respond to an answer that wasa posted here before mine.

- how to deal with people you have to work with that don't like you much

Homeschoolers do this all the time on sports teams, in co-op classes, in duel-enrollment college classes (yeah, lots of homeschoolers start taking college classes fairly early), in clubs and activities, with siblings they don't get along with... pretty much everywhere.

- how to deal things that are unfair

Life is unfair. Homeschoolers have to experience life too. Everything from fighting with siblings to getting grounded for things they think are unfair to the bigger issues like their educational freedoms being threatened or being discriminated against in the community for whatever reason. I know I've experienced a lot of unfair situations. Hell, I'm blind, and that's unfair, but I deal with it.

- how to negotiate when everything is due at once.
Um, homeschoolers have due dates too, and since we usually have to not only manage assignments (both at home and in co-ops and duel enrollment classes) but also our own schedules, homeschoolers tend to be better with time management.

- how to be a dork and grow into not so much a dork.

I'll ignore the fact that this sentence barely makes sense, but homeschoolers grow up and mature too. That's what this question is about, remember?

- how to be silly with friends and laugh at yourself.
Okay, homeschooled guys are guys too. We have senses of humor. Homeschoolers play games and tell jokes and act silly and laugh at themselves and with their friends. We're human!

- how to work on projects with people you don't know or know but don't like.

Already responded to this one in my answer. See above.

- how to interact with people smarter/or not as smart as you and everyone feel like it's positive.

This goes along with the no-age-segregation thing I talked about earlier.

- how to deal with mean,rude,people.
Do you think that mean/rude people only exist in school? You should get out more. They're in the real world too, and hojmeschoolers spend A LOT of time out in the real world.
Do you know of any books for teens w/mature content?
Are there any mature teen books that are pretty good?
I've read Exit Here, Keeping the Moon, Someone Like You, Just Listen, This Lullaby, Dear John, A Walk to Remember, The Notebook, The God of Animals, The Twilight series, and the Truth About Forever; etc.
I like more mature books, so it really doesn't matter if there is sexual or drug related content.
I like romance novels also, and I like horse books.
Dracula by Bram Stoker and others listed at
www.squidoo.com/vampiretales

anything by Sarah Dessen, Ann Brashares, Meg Cabot, Jodi Picoult, Nicholas Sparks, Ellen Hopkins, or Laurie Halse Anderson - Titles at the 1st link below.

Go Ask Alice by Anonymous
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
13 Reason Why by Jay Asher
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
A Separate Peace by John Knowles
Looking for Alaska by John Green

Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
The Other Boleyn Girl and others by Philippa Gregory
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, Persuasion, and Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Little Women, Little Men, and Jo's Boys by Louisa May Alcott
My Antonia by Willa Cather
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

The Wee Free Men, A Hat Full of Sky, and Wintersmith by Terry Pratchett
The Belgariad and The Mallorean by David Eddings
The Chronicles of Narnia by CS Lewis
The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Trilogy by JRR Tolkien
Odd Thomas series by Dean Koontz
Inkheart series by Cornelia Funke
Fablehaven series by Brandon Mull
Eragon, Eldest, and Brisingr by Christopher Paolini
Storms of Vengeance by John Beachem
Wake and Fade by Lisa McMann
The Giver and sequels by Lois Lowry
A Great and Terrible Beauty and sequels by Libba Bray
Howl's Moving Castle
Maxiumum Ride series by James Patterson
Pendragon series by DJ MacHale

anything by Anne McCaffrey, Andre Norton, Ursula K. LeGuin, Tamora Pierce, Donita K. Paul, Mercedes Lackey, Chris D'Lacey, Garth Nix, Terry Brooks, Raymond Fiest, Gene Wolfe, George RR Martin, etc. - Titles at the 2nd link below
Teens -What constitutes "mature and responsible behavior"?
Is a 13 year old capable of making the same decisions that an 18 year old will make?
What behaviors do you think make a teen mature and responsible?
being responsible as in taking care of your business, you can pick up after yourself without nobody asking you to do it, help around the house, do your homework and be an A B student, and as for mature not to get in trouble for stupid decisions you might make, but i think everybody in this world has a little imaturity in them, its always a little fun to act goofy or play around like a guy... and nobody in this world is perfect, just try to be the best that you can be!! : )
Anyone else noticed this? Why are Mature teens and young people are always Conservatives?
and the ones who can't make it on their own are always Liberals?
The answer is in the question. The liberals have been convinced that the world owes them and have not been taught responsibility and self-sufficiency. They expect life to be handed to them.
In your opinion, how do mature teens act?
I'm just wondering because I want to read about other people's thoughts and opinions.
well im 18 but Ive been mature since I was about 16, being mature means you have a job, you go to school ON YOUR OWN and don't skip, you do your school work and pay attention, you pick up your things on your own at home, you don't talk back with your parents, afterall if u are mature you wouldn't have to, you don't lie to them to get your way, and also I think paying for your own thing qualifies, to me it has nothing to do with personality, because you can be responsible and mature, but be a goofball too...as long as u do what u gotta do, ur good.
How do you tell you guyren or teens about mature subjects?
How do you tell your guyren about a death in the family or about other mature subjects. I noticed many other parents are not straight forward with telling their guyren about mature subjects. Even though it is difficult I have to be straight forward because the guyren will understand better if you just tell them instead of putting the subject on the side.
I just tell My 14yr old daughter like it is. For Death, I will Explain as Best as I can on What Happened to The Person. As For Sex I will be Open With Her, Because I Want To Prevent Teenage Pregnancy. Money Issue, I Tell Her Like it is, No Spending Money if Not Necessary. I told Her What We Do Need and Don't Need. I showed Her to Buy Clothes when They are on Discounts. Now She Buys To Blouses under $15 an get a pair for that price & Her Skinny Jeans $15 a Pair (only when She can Find a Good Sale). So You Continue to Be Open with Your Guy, it will Ease Your Mind :-)

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