According to the B.R. Bjorklund, author of “The Journey of Adulthood” defines the social clock as the normal sequence of adult life experiences (2015). In my family, I do believe the normal sequences eventually took place but because of nonnormative life events starting from mother surviving through it had to take place. Unfortunately, my grandparents are all deceased and sadly I just recently loss my great aunt who was 96 years old. So, my concern was who was a good candidate to interview for this …show more content…
When interviewing my mother her biggest regret was not graduating high school. She was smart, and a great writer that wrote many poems starting at a very young age. One mistake in her life totally change her social clock with graduating, marriage, and even having children at the typical normal age. However, it did not change the common change with the biological clock. According to Bjorklund, the biological clock are changes adults share because we are species that undergoes natural ageing processes (2015). So, the graying of her hair and the wrinkles in her hand still manage to occur; she did not escape from that. However, longevity seems to inhabit in our genes. My great grandparents and older family members live to about 90 years of age. Unfortunately, due to bad habits and wrong decisions my grandmother (my mom’s mother) made she died at the age of 53. Which were very traumatizing for my mother as well as my sister. During that time of their life, I was not even born. According to my mother not even the thought of having another child was even considered. At that time, my mother at the age of 36 was a stay at home wife with 5 kids. She had no high school diploma, or a college degree. When she did go to work she was a housekeeping at a local hotel. There were some normative history-graded influences that my mother experience. In