What If You're Not Behind in Life?
- Tharun Kumar
- Jun 21
- 2 min read
Modern life has a strange obsession with timelines. Society treats life like a spreadsheet.
By a certain age, you're expected to have finished your education. By another, you're expected to have a career. Then come expectations about relationships, marriage, financial stability, and a dozen other milestones that seem to arrive with invisible deadlines attached.
The result is that many people spend years feeling like they're falling behind.
A classmate gets promoted.
A friend gets married.
A cousin buys a house.
Someone else seems to have their future planned with military precision.
And quietly, a question begins to form:
"Why does everyone else seem to know what they're doing?"
It's an uncomfortable feeling because it often masquerades as failure.
But being behind and feeling behind are not always the same thing.
Life is not a race with a single finish line.
People begin from different circumstances. Some carry responsibilities that others never face. Some spend years managing illness, family pressures, financial challenges, or personal struggles that remain invisible to everyone around them.
The problem is that comparison rarely accounts for any of that.
It only compares outcomes.
Not journeys.
Not obstacles.
Not context.
Just outcomes.
What if some people aren't late at all?
What if they're simply growing on a different timeline?
The phrase "late bloomer" is often used as a consolation. Yet many of the most meaningful achievements in life happen long after society expects them to.
Healing, confidence, love, and self-understanding can arrive late.
That doesn't make them less real.
It simply makes them later.
Perhaps the goal isn't to catch up with everyone else.
Perhaps the goal is to become who you're meant to become, at the pace your life allows.
This question became one of the inspirations behind my novel, Echoes of a Late Bloom, a story about two young adults navigating invisible struggles, delayed growth, family expectations, and the search for a life that feels authentically their own.
If you'd like to learn more about the book, you can find it here:



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