Absolutely agree! For a long time, I've felt older than I was. Starting around 11 years old (when I started growing), people would mistake me for a young teenager because of the way I talked combined with my height. Ever since then, on average, people would guess I was about 4-5 years older than I actually was. When I was in a Freshman in high school, I made friends with a group of Sophomores and Juniors. About four months after we started hanging out, they were shocked to realize I was only a Freshman... They thought I was a Junior that they simply hadn't met! It was funny, but was upsetting my Senior year when my closest friends had already graduated.
I had a boyfriend a few years ago who told me his favorite thing about me was how I could be as carefree as a child or as responsible as an adult, depending on the situation. I definitely think it makes life a lot more fun when you can approach things with a child's curiosity and an adult's knowledge/skills!
Even just this past week I realized that my favorite person at my new college isn't any of my classmates, but one of my professors. He's in his 50's/60's, but when we talk after class we're clearly on the same level. Similarly, my boyfriend is 30 while I'm 23... and we're at about the same place, maturity-wise.
unduki wrote:
I was also told I was an old soul but I don't think that's correct. I don't think it's wisdom as much as powers of observation. Perhaps you notice things others don't and they are amazed and mystified by your ability.
I think of wisdom as being the ability to learn from others' mistakes, without having to make those mistakes, yourself. That requires strong powers of observation, of course, so I don't think that's far off. When an observant 14 year old watches classmates do something stupid and become hurt by it, the observant 14 year old learns a lesson. What I don't understand is why more people are incapable of learning said-lesson. If you watch your neighbor try to skateboard down a stairwell and they break their leg, why is it that other teens (who also watched) STILL want to try it?! Or how about a teen that grew up watching older family members struggle to quit smoking, hearing them cough as though they're about to lose their lungs, dealing with the health problems associated with it, knowing damn well just how addictive cigarettes are even if you only try them a few times... and yet they STILL think it's a good idea to try it! I don't think I will ever, for the life of me, understand this.