A Quote by Jack O'Connell

If I'm among my boys or people I've grown up with, I can be immature. — © Jack O'Connell
If I'm among my boys or people I've grown up with, I can be immature.
as all women know, there are really no men at all. There are grown-up boys, and middle-aged boys, and elderly boys, and even sometimes very old boys. But the essential difference is simply exterior. Your man is always a boy.
Boys are capital fellows in their own way, among their mates; but they are unwholesome companions for grown people.
What's the point of being a grown-up if you don't get to be immature?
Being trans, I've grown up with the understanding that most women are born girls, yet some are born boys. And most men are born boys, yet some are born girls. And if you're ready for this, some people are born girls or boys and choose to identify outside our society's binary system, making them genderqueer.
Boys like it when you talk to them as if they were grown men—at least he always did when he was a kid—because they pretend that’s what they are anyhow, grown-up men, and they do it for their entire lives.
You look green, immature. A young boy playing at business, dressing up in the manner in which he believes an actual grown-up would. Your viewpoint of business attire is one of wide-eyed wonder from the nursery door.
The adult who is constantly changing friends and changing mates is immature. He/she cannot stick it out because he/she has not grown up.
We find the instinct to shut out competition deep-rooted even among banks and corporations, among corner grocers and haberdasheries, among peanut vendors and shoeshine boys-and even among young ladies in search of a husband.
Do I think John Wall has grown up? Absolutely. Do I think he was immature when he broke into the league? Absolutely.
You expect two-year olds to wear diapers and make a mess with just about everything they touch. We have to allow the young in Christ to be immature, and yes, make messes. Young and immature prophetic people will act like young and immature prophetic people. The belief that some have tried to impose on the prophetic - that if you made one mistake you are a false prophet - inhibits their maturity, or worse, it can profoundly distort their character.
The problem with growing up is that once you're grown up, the people who aren't grown up aren't fun anymore.
Even though I was chronologically 21, I was pretty immature and naive for my age, having grown up in a small, isolated ranching town, eighty desolate miles from the nearest city, and back when there was much less cultural homogenisation by way of TV.
I have always been tall. When I was five, I towered above all the boys in my class, so it is something I have grown up with.
Little boys love machines; girls adore horses; grown-up men and women like to walk.
Some people do need to grow up, but I don't think I'm there yet. I don't think I'm ready to do grown-up things and be a grown-up.
Boys in their twenties are a waste of time. They have nothing to offer conversationally; they're immature. I feel like I have a better shot with someone in his thirties.
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