Sorry, I didn't know how else the word the title. Let me explain.
I was 15 when I had finally found myself a group of friends for the first time as an adolescent, and I felt so pleased. But unfortunately they turned out to be very spiteful. I wasn't that sort but I got caught up in all the drama and I was usually the scapegoat and the punchbag. The arguments (that I didn't even start) were over typical teenage things such as boys and a few silly, petty things but still typical of high school girls.
But the teachers kept calling us childish and said that we were like primary school kids. At the time I thought ''well I guess I'm 15 now, I have to grow up.''
But since I became an adult, I've realised that being 15 was a hard age and I have read everywhere (in magazines and on TV documentaries) that a lot of teenage girls around age 12-17 are typically very complain-y and often fall out with each other, talk about each other, compare themselves with each other, and get into complicated dramas.
So if we were being typical teenage girls, why were we lectured and told we were acting like little kids? They worked in a high school, high schoolers are still children, surely they expect that sort of behaviour. I'd understand it if we were adults at work, but we were still kids at school and most 15-year-olds are still immature compared to 20-year-olds.
I was 15 when I had finally found myself a group of friends for the first time as an adolescent, and I felt so pleased. But unfortunately they turned out to be very spiteful. I wasn't that sort but I got caught up in all the drama and I was usually the scapegoat and the punchbag. The arguments (that I didn't even start) were over typical teenage things such as boys and a few silly, petty things but still typical of high school girls.
But the teachers kept calling us childish and said that we were like primary school kids. At the time I thought ''well I guess I'm 15 now, I have to grow up.''
But since I became an adult, I've realised that being 15 was a hard age and I have read everywhere (in magazines and on TV documentaries) that a lot of teenage girls around age 12-17 are typically very complain-y and often fall out with each other, talk about each other, compare themselves with each other, and get into complicated dramas.
So if we were being typical teenage girls, why were we lectured and told we were acting like little kids? They worked in a high school, high schoolers are still children, surely they expect that sort of behaviour. I'd understand it if we were adults at work, but we were still kids at school and most 15-year-olds are still immature compared to 20-year-olds.