Entering Adulthood
Successful Adulthood
Adult Growing Pains
Parenting and the Environment
Support and Therapeutic Care
100

Establishing close, committed relationships while maintaining an individual identity is this developmental task of young adulthood.

Developing intimacy

100

An adult who accepts responsibility for personal decisions and their consequences demonstrates this characteristic.

Personal responsibility

100

Adults may experience this internal struggle when their actual accomplishments do not match the goals they imagined earlier in life.

Reevaluating goals and expectations

100

Loss of sleep, reduced privacy, financial strain, and increased responsibility are four stresses associated with this adult role.

Parenting

100

Adults without dependable friends, family, or community connections may experience this painful emotional condition.

Loneliness or social isolation

200

Selecting a career, becoming financially responsible, and establishing an independent household reflect this developmental task.

Achieving occupational and economic independence

200

Maintaining satisfying connections with family, friends, coworkers, and intimate partners demonstrates this characteristic.

The ability to form healthy relationships
200

Changes in appearance, energy, health, fertility, or physical ability require adults to adjust to this developmental reality.

Aging
200

Differences between caregivers about discipline, rules, and responsibilities can create this parenting stress.

Conflict over child-rearing practices

200

A lack of social support can weaken coping abilities and increase vulnerability to this type of distress.

Psychological or emotional distress

300

This strong inner understanding of one’s values, abilities, needs, and goals helps an adult make independent decisions.

Personal identity

300

Adjusting plans after a job loss and seeking new opportunities rather than giving up demonstrates this quality.

Flexibility or adaptability

300

Changes in appearance, energy, health, fertility, or physical ability require adults to adjust to this developmental reality.

Conflict between personal needs and responsibilities

300

Guiding children while also caring for aging parents places many middle-aged adults in this generation.

Sandwich generation

300

Fear of HIV and AIDS may lead some young adults to avoid intimacy, experience anxiety, or change these personal practices.

Sexual behaviors or relationship decisions

400

Without a stable sense of personal identity, a young adult may depend excessively on others for approval and have difficulty making these.

Choices or commitments

400

Recognizing strengths and limitations without feeling either worthless or superior demonstrates this.

Realistic self-concept

400

Questioning the meaning, direction, and accomplishments of one’s life may be described by this familiar term.

A midlife crisis or midlife reevaluation

400

Poverty, unemployment, discrimination, unsafe housing, inadequate health care, and community violence are examples of these problems.

Environmental stressors

400

Helping an adult identify problems, recognize strengths, explore alternatives, and make realistic decisions is this therapeutic intervention.

Problem-solving assistance

500

The ability to form meaningful relationships, assume responsibility, and adapt constructively to change reflects these.

Characteristics of a successful adult

500

Responsibility, healthy relationships, and adaptability are three characteristics associated with this outcome.

Successful adult functioning

500

Reevaluating goals, adapting to aging, and balancing personal needs with responsibilities are examples of these.

Internal or developmental problems of adulthood

500

Environmental problems may reduce access to employment, housing, transportation, education, health care, and these resources needed for coping.

Social and community supports

500

Providing emotional support, strengthening coping and problem-solving skills, and connecting an adult with appropriate resources are three interventions intended to improve this.

Psychosocial functioning