Write a Story on Age is just a number, it is never too late to start afresh
Those who will give answer I will mark him as brain list and follow him
Answers
Answer:
I hope it's may help you
Explanation:
In 1980, I was 25 and hadn’t yet bloomed. This hit home one night while I was working as a security guard in San Jose, Calif. Just after dark, as I started my perimeter patrol of a fenced rent-a-truck yard, I heard barking from the lumber yard next door. I swung my flashlight around and came face-to-face with my counterpart on the other side of the fence: a guard dog. The implication was sobering. I was a Stanford graduate, and my professional peer was a Rottweiler.
In a few months, Steve Jobs, also 25 at the time, would take Apple public, change the computer industry and become fabulously rich. I, on the other hand, was poor and stuck. My story is embarrassing, but is it that unusual?
Today we are madly obsessed with early achievement. We celebrate those who explode out of the gates, who scorch the SAT, get straight A’s in AP courses, win a spot at Harvard or Stanford, get a first job at Google or Goldman Sachs, and headline those ubiquitous 30-under-30 lists. In 2014, Time magazine started an annual list of “Most Influential Teens.” Yes, teens.
But precocious achievement is the exception, not the norm. The fact is, we mature and develop at different rates. All of us will have multiple cognitive peaks throughout our lives, and the talents and passions that we have to offer can emerge across a range of personal circumstances, not just in formal educational settings focused on a few narrow criteria of achievement. Late bloomers are everywhere once you know to look for them.
“I went back to school at 46 to become a psychotherapist”
This is the story of Karen White head
“I was part of the sandwich generation with one child in college, one graduating from high school and one in middle school, all while taking care of my aging mom who was having major health issues at the time. I was working as a third-grade teacher after taking a break to stay home with my kids. After a few years, I realized I was miserable. I started having physical health problems and my stress level was through the roof. This wasn’t what I wanted to be doing anymore, but I had no clue what I did want. So with the support and encouragement of my husband and family, I took a job in an independent school working in fundraising and communications. When my immediate supervisor left to work at an inpatient hospice and asked me to go with her, I found myself excited to connect with the families and patients. I started meeting with different professionals to explore career options in medicine or social services and took time to review course catalogs at universities. I decided on an online Masters in Social Work program at Boston University. I quit my job, took a leave of absence midway through to care for my mom who was having health issues and completed the program in three years. I now have a private practice, Karen Whitehead Counseling, where I help clients with stress, anxiety, cancer and chronic illness enjoy life again.”