Adult learning
Mature student loneliness. You are in the right place, just not quite with the right people.
Mature students bring more to the classroom than their younger peers — more experience, more perspective, often more focus. What they frequently find is that none of this makes the social experience any less lonely.
Being older than your classmates by a decade or more creates a genuine social gap.
The social world of most educational institutions is calibrated around a particular life stage — first encounters with independence, forming identity through peer groups, the freedoms and anxieties of early adulthood. Mature students have largely passed through this stage. Their concerns, their reference points, the things they find funny or serious — all of it tends to be out of sync with the majority of their cohort.
This creates a peculiar social experience: you are technically part of the group, attending the same things, doing the same work — but the informal bonding that happens around the edges of formal learning largely happens without you.
And at home, the same difficulty often applies in reverse — friends and family who did not make the same choice can struggle to fully understand what the experience is like, leaving you holding the complexity largely alone.
Your life experience makes you valuable. It also sets you apart.
Mature students often find that their professional and life experience makes them quicker to grasp certain material, more confident in seminars, better at applying concepts practically. But this same experience marks them as different in ways that complicate the social dynamic. Younger students may find them intimidating; they may find the conversation levels in group work frustrating.
The experience that makes you good at the work is also what makes you an outsider to the culture. This is a real tension, and naming it honestly — to someone who understands — is often where it becomes more bearable.
It may look different from the connection you imagined. That does not make it less real.
Seek other mature students deliberately
In most cohorts there are others. They are often not hard to spot. The specific solidarity of two people who are both slightly older than everyone else, and both slightly uncertain what they are doing there, can be immediate and genuine.
Let go of the expected social experience
The student experience advertised in prospectuses is not yours. That is not a failure. Your version of this — commuter, responsible adult, determined late learner — is its own thing and worth claiming.
Use the experience gap as a topic rather than an obstacle
Your life experience before returning is genuinely interesting, including to younger classmates. The gap can be a conversation rather than a wall.
Speak to someone who just listens.
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