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Not Ready to Adult Yet: A Totally Ill-informed Guide to Life
Not Ready to Adult Yet: A Totally Ill-informed Guide to Life
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Not Ready to Adult Yet: A Totally Ill-informed Guide to Life

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Not Ready to Adult Yet: A Totally Ill-informed Guide to Life
Iain Stirling

Comedian Iain Stirling is best known as the brilliantly funny voice of the BAFTA-award winning smash hit Love Island. Despite his many accolades, and his mum telling him he’s her ‘special little soldier’ every day, Iain still struggles with everyday adult life. What a textbook millennial.Looking back at his journey to adulthood, Iain explores why millennials are the way they are – and whether that makes us self-obsessed, work-shy, mollycoddled, egomaniacs; or just a misunderstood generation with a crippling fear of failure.Millennials have been celebrated and scorned; they’re the envy, fascination and disgrace of the world. But is there more to this #selfie and avocado-obsessed generation that can’t grow up than meets the eye?Throughout life millennials have been taught that they are perfect and should live a perfect life. They’ve been told, whatever happens, don’t fuck up. And then they enter the real world. And failure quickly rears its ugly head. A head millennials weren’t warned about and definitely aren’t ready for.Iain knows a lot about fucking up. And he’s ready to share.Funny, provocative and full of his trademark razor-sharp wit, this is Iain’s guide to what life is really like for millennials and how they can navigate it better.

(#u9d2479f7-704f-587b-bc80-2d15bcff91b1)

Copyright (#u9d2479f7-704f-587b-bc80-2d15bcff91b1)

HarperCollinsPublishers

1 London Bridge Street

London SE1 9GF

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

First published by HarperCollins 2018

FIRST EDITION

© Iain Stirling 2018

Cover layout design © HarperCollinsPublishers 2018

Cover photograph © Jay Brooks 2018

A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

Iain Stirling asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Find out about HarperCollins and the environment at

www.harpercollins.co.uk/green (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/green)

Source ISBN: 9780008288006

Ebook Edition © August 2018 ISBN: 9780008288020

Version: 2018-06-21

Dedication (#u9d2479f7-704f-587b-bc80-2d15bcff91b1)

To my mum Alison, my dad Rodger and my sister Kirsten. This book isn’t for you, it’s because of you. I love you.

CONTENTS

Cover (#u87d7d66b-3f47-5f8c-b293-3a4b2edc7a24)

Title Page (#u21e97c71-01e5-5a82-89fc-af1375f8820c)

Copyright (#ub9186a33-525d-5e79-8165-70143bf143e4)

Dedication (#ua2371502-e9ea-58f3-acd6-f8d617e821fd)

WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN ADULT (#ubbec129e-9fd0-589f-bfcf-78ea60253950)

INTRODUCTION

I ONCE TOLD AN EIGHT-YEAR-OLD TO GO FUCK HIMSELF (#u814be43a-957f-5942-8bde-ecea3219cfb6)

CHAPTER 1

BAD PARENTING (#udaf89796-cec8-5ce8-b783-b20c42663f55)

Mollycoddled

CHAPTER 2

SCHOOLED (#u2572e29c-c7aa-55f0-a7b1-703c35361fcf)

‘The Best Days of Your Life …’

CHAPTER 3

LIFE ON THE SMALL SCREEN (#u190e13fe-ea0a-5869-83cc-cb1f876416dc)

The Years BW (Before Wi-fi )

CHAPTER 4

U OK HUN? (#u6bd24857-a122-5424-ab87-0bcaeb1f8094)

The Power of Love … Island

CHAPTER 5

THE GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER (#u839a8cc7-e325-5599-892c-97df7cfa925c)

We’re All Fake Happy

CHAPTER 6

NINE TILL FIVE … (#u05b094b8-e1a2-5c67-bc35-c73300e89841)

What a Way to Make a Living (Apparently)

CHAPTER 7

SNOWFLAKES (#u0f0b69bc-2432-5a06-85e7-23dd218d6cca)

A Generation that Likes to (Political) Party Hard

CHAPTER 8

FEAR OF FAILURE (#u7eaf3d4f-0b62-5c9d-a39a-52185384eee1)

Here Comes the Science Bit …

CONCLUSION

THE INSPIRATIONAL SPEECH MOMENT (#u81b04b69-484c-5bc2-8c03-2f7792b41bb3)

A TREAT FOR THOSE WHO’VE SKIPPED TO THE BACK (#ue33875cb-2dc9-59f8-bdc8-e062bc5c3fa2)

‘The Millennial Circle’

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS (#u78d6796d-01ba-56e9-a028-53b49ca31a04)

About the Publisher (#u2b21abc1-ea98-5cca-b9f2-0fdb8df7360b)

adulting

NOUN

informal

The practice of behaving in a way characteristic of a responsible adult, especially the accomplishment of mundane but necessary tasks.

However, the entire time you are carrying out said tasks you are uncomfortably aware that you have no idea what the hell you are doing, you will fuck it up and eventually be found out.

‘Fucking hell, this adulting is IMPOSSIBLE. How do I explain to my boss that I’m late for work because I dropped my phone in the toilet while watching a YouTube video and taking a shit?’

WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN ADULT (#u9d2479f7-704f-587b-bc80-2d15bcff91b1)

I’m constantly told by my parents, friends and my birth certificate that I’m an adult now, but what does that even mean? And why does it seem to be so insanely difficult? Following some in-depth research/googling I have ascertained that, generally speaking, the idea of being an adult is split into two camps, that of the ‘responsible adult’ and the ‘irresponsible adult’. These two definitions are as follows.

Responsible adult: taking on the new-found responsibilities that come with being a grown-up, such as getting a job, buying a house and having children.

Irresponsible adult: now the restrictions of childhood have been removed you can do or act however you want. For example, staying up as late as you like, drinking alcohol, spending your money as you choose.

Whether ‘responsible’ or ‘irresponsible’, these actions carry with them that bizarre feeling of, ‘Wow, I’m being such an adult right now.’ I’ve listed a few of my favourite such moments that make you feel like a grown-up here:

COOKING MEALS FROM SCRATCH

GOING ON HOLIDAY WITHOUT YOUR PARENTS

DRIVING, PARTICULARLY DURING A TRICKY PARALLEL PARK

FIRST TIME YOU GO INTO YOUR OVERDRAFT (LOSES ITS ALLURE QUICKLY)

REALISING YOU CAN EAT OUT EVEN IF IT ISN’T A SPECIAL OCCASION

BEING IN THE SUPERMARKET AND REALISING YOU CAN BUY WHATEVER YOU LIKE

DEFROSTING A FREEZER

DRIVING THROUGH A CITY CENTRE AND BEING ABLE TO CONFIDENTLY STATE, ‘THAT USED TO BE A BLOCKBUSTERS’

LIKING COLDPLAY

BEING ABLE TO LEGALLY RENT A VAN

BEING TOLD TO TURN THE VOLUME DOWN BY YOUR NEIGHBOURS RATHER THAN YOUR PARENTS

IRONING YOUR FIRST SHIRT

HAVING A NIGHT OUT THAT DOESN’T INVOLVE PRE-DRINKING

THE FIRST TIME YOU REALISE YOU LIKE OLIVES

HAVING A COFFEE INSTEAD OF A DESSERT

HELPING YOUR PARENTS PICK UP SOMETHING THAT’S HEAVY

WHEN YOU’RE HUNGRY AND WAITING FOR SOMEONE TO COOK YOU DINNER THEN REALISE THAT SOMEONE IS YOU

MAKING PEOPLE TAKE THEIR SHOES OFF BEFORE COMING INTO YOUR HOUSE

WHEN BANK HOLIDAYS BECOME A CHANCE TO CARRY OUT CHORES, NOT NURSE HANGOVERS

INTRODUCTION

I ONCE TOLD AN EIGHT-YEAR-OLD TO GO FUCK HIMSELF (#u9d2479f7-704f-587b-bc80-2d15bcff91b1)

A few years ago now I told an eight-year-old to go fuck himself. That moment was unintentional and clearly unfortunate, but it would go on to help me haul myself from a malaise I had found myself in for a number of years. Like many of life’s significant events, I was worryingly unaware of its importance, as is the case with the majority of life-changing moments: applying for a job, meeting the person who goes on to be your significant other or even buying that leather jacket that remains, to this day, a real staple in your wardrobe. It was just another moment like all the others; in fact, minutes before, I was sitting backstage at yet another gig, readying myself to perform to a new group of strangers like I do every night of the week.

What was it then about that particular night that sticks so solidly in my psyche like an annoying bit of apple skin between teeth? The fact I swore in a child’s face certainly adds to the level of permanence afforded to that particular memory, but it’s not just the extreme embarrassment of the situation. Only last year I walked into a hotel room where a businessman was taking a shit, where I told him my full name and then left. Although that incident still haunts me today – and I’m assuming that businessman – it is this particular gig that always comes to me in my moments of solitude. In the shower, just before I go to bed, when I’m on a train with only a podcast and my own thoughts to keep me company. Boom! There it is. That little voice hidden in the depths of my mind pops in to quickly remind me of that evening.

‘Hello, Iain. Remember that time you told an eight-year-old to go fuck himself? You do? Oh good. Well, have a nice night.’

I certainly could have been in a better place, being recently single, technically speaking ‘out of work’ (though financially buoyant) and, most crucially, unfulfilled. That’s the big one. You ever felt like that? Even though on the face of it life is good – your work is tolerable, bordering on enjoyable, your social life is filled with interesting and entertaining friends, and your family are as supportive and loving as ever – for some reason there is that niggling feeling deep down in the depths of your soul that something’s not quite right, something’s missing. You feel like a selfish prick for even entertaining it; you have everything you’ve ever needed and so many people have made so many sacrifices so that you could have it, but ‘it’ isn’t enough and you can’t for the life of you work out why.

What the fuck even is ‘it’ and why can’t I just have ‘it’? ‘It’ is like The X Factor of life satisfaction, but none of us seem to have the Simon Cowell-esque ability to identify it correctly; it always seems to narrowly pass us by. There is nothing you can do to help identify it more clearly – literally nothing. I even spent a month with my shirt unbuttoned offensively low and my trousers pulled embarrassingly high. It didn’t help – I just got funny looks.

For years I was told by friends, family, school teachers, colleges and even social media that I was special and destined for great things. I’m fully aware that’s not unique to me, by the way. I’m sure you too have been awarded certificates at school and told how beautiful you are in Facebook comments, as we live in a world where praise is constantly heaped onto everyone. Despite this wall of positive encouragement, however, in the specific moment I swore at an eight-year-old, I just felt like another cog in the machine, another Starbucks-drinking, McDonald’s-munching face in the crowd.

To some of you this lack of fulfilment will resonate; to others, however, it will sound ungrateful, an odd note on which to start a book. I’m fully aware that many of you will be reading this on your holidays: you’ve found a sun lounger, bought your fruity cocktail, taken the obligatory photo of your legs with the ocean as their beautiful backdrop and posted it online with the sole intention of mocking your friends who are currently dragging their sorry asses into the office for another torturous Monday. You’ve then opened this book and thought, ‘Fuck me, this Love Island prick’s a bit down in the dumps.’ Fear ye not, my ITV2-loving amigos, for this book is about optimism and ‘living your best life’, as is famously said by tedious people on Twitter – and now me, apparently. Not to mention the story of me telling that eight-year-old to go fuck himself is in fact a bloody doozy – so there is plenty to look forward to!