How Children Affect Your Life and Success

Science has proved that many of what happens to us in childhood affect our character and background as adults. Here are scientific facts that link the past with future success. Association brings your social skills to the garden, determine whether you will attend school or not, or whether you will [...]
Science has proved that many of what happens to us in childhood affect our character and background as adults. Here are scientific facts that link the past with future success.
Association Brings Work
Your social skills in the garden determine whether you will attend school or not, or if you will find a job. Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania and from “University Duke” have analyzed more than 700 garden children by the age of 25.
They discovered an important link between their social skills as garden children and their success as adults two decades later. The 20-year study showed that children who interacted with their peers, who helped and understood their feelings by solving their own problems, were more likely to pursue higher education and find a good job.
Divorced Parents
If parents of a young child divorce, he is likely to develop a poor relationship with them in adulthood. This applied to children between the ages of 3 and 5, where researchers showed the possibility of re-creating family ties, especially with fathers. The University of Illinois, however, proved that this did not foresee bad love ties.
Imiting My Parents
If a child imitates his parents, studies reveal that he/she is likely to develop a desire to think that actions have a kind of unknown purpose. This makes it more open to share and broadcast culture further into life.
Girls Follow Mothers
If you're a girl child and your mother works during this time, you're likely to become boss in the future and make a lot of money. A Harvard Business School study has found this, where significant benefits were seen in children who were raised by nonresident mothers.
According to research, girls of working mothers had more schooling and were likely to maintain a supervisory role in their work. They also earned 23 percent more than adult girls from stay - at - home mothers.
Abuse Brings Obsessity
If you have been sexually abused as a child, you have a higher risk of becoming obese when you grow up. Some studies have shown the connection between sexual abuse and other traumatic experiences in childhood and eating disorders. For women, the risk of obesity was 27 percent high, and for males 66 percent.
Chain gets you into trouble
High school students who try to be lame and awesome experience problems in adulthood. Also, teenagers who behave older than their age to gain popularity are likely to create problems with drugs, alcohol and engage in criminal behavior at the age of 20.
Poverty Harms Memory
People who grow up poor and who come from lower economic classes end up with a smaller ability to think of certain objects simultaneously, according to the University of Oregon.
Early Maths, an Priority
A study of 35 thousand preschoolers in the United States, Canada, and England has revealed who learn early mathematics can have a huge advantage. This ability also relates to future reading achievements.
Violence Brings Violence
If you have seen much violence on TV as a child, you are likely to become an aggressive adult. According to a 15-year study, children shape their behavior according to violent scenes, where criminals are rewarded for the violence they show.
Drugs make you serious.
If you grow up to see your parents abuse drugs or alcohol, it will affect your parents ' behavior in later years. Since you thus neglect your childhood, you will become very serious.
Educated mother, educated girl
A 2014 study by psychologist Sandra Tang of Michigan University found that mothers who finished high school were more likely to raise girls who did the same.
If you've been ridiculed, it's gonna be hard for you.
A study that examined British children from 7 years of age until they grew up and were 50 years old revealed that children who were ridiculed by peers had more difficult relationships with others, were depressed, anxious, and earned less money.
Babies watching TV do not speak well
By observing mothers and children, one study found that television reduces parent-children's communication. Likewise, not stressed parents raised children with higher prosperity.
Childhood is a part of life that you cannot erase, since it affects your adult life and depends on your success.










