What an amazing book! To everyone in their twenties and early thirties who just feels lost and hopeless and like they are losing in the adulting world, please read this book because Rachel Jones wrote it for us.
She writes so directly, honestly, and with a gospel centered focus, but also with great understanding about everything that we are feeling since after all she is living it, too. Each chapter tackles a different issue or emotion that many young people are feeling, answering, acknowledging, and addressing many of the questions we have.
Again, please read this book. I was so encouraged and know many others will be, too.
I have noticed some critiques on this book. Ultimately it is praised for its gospel centeredness, but older Christians have said that Rachel Jones only relies on her experiences for content and that she is dramatizing what is now called the "Quarter Life Crises." To which my response is 1)She never claims it is not entirely based on experience. What else would it be based on? And she bases ever thought on what the Bible says. 2)If we can't have a Quarter Life Crises, then they can't have their Mid Life Crises. Seriously. Both stages of life are hard transitions. Both require Jesus. And sometimes, more than sometimes, a little bit of appropriate drama is okay and necessary.
Favorite quote: "And being a Christian ought to turn our expectations of adulting on their head. If we're following Christ, life's big adventure is not climbing the career ladder or meeting milestones- it's about becoming 'mature and complete' in our faith. So the measure of whether we're adulting right is not whether we've got our own place with a pet, but whether our character looks like Christ's. That's what 'maturity' means- becoming like Jesus, the most courageous, compassionate, convictional, kind grown-up of all time. How do we grow in that maturity? Through trials" (13).