Ten Practical Things Young Adults Need To Know (That School Skips)
The last few days involved trying to explain to my 19 year old son how buying a car works - lease vs. loan, trade-ins, down payments, how everything is negotiable, and how to play the game. Made me realize that there's a lot they don't teach in school. We've done some of these with him, and will do others as the opportunity presents. He's a contrarian, however, so it's never easy because he "knows better."
1. How Money Actually Works
Not just math—cash flow, taxes, credit, and compounding.
Why carrying a balance hurts
How interest works for you (investing) vs. against you (debt)
What a budget really is: a decision system, not a restriction
2. How to Read and Question a Contract
Every major decision comes with paperwork.
Leases, loans, employment agreements
What “fine print” actually means
When to ask: “What happens if things go wrong?”
3. Basic Health Management
You are your own system operator now.
Sleep, diet, movement matter more than hacks
How to navigate doctors, insurance, and prescriptions
Preventive care vs. reactive care
4. Time Is a System, Not a Schedule
Most people don’t fail from laziness—they fail from bad systems.
Calendars vs. to-do lists vs. priorities
Energy management > time management
The difference between urgent and important
5. How to Communicate Clearly
This is a multiplier skill.
Writing a direct email that gets a decision
Asking better questions
Saying “no” without burning bridges
6. What Work Actually Is
School teaches tasks. Work is about outcomes and reliability.
Being someone others can depend on
Understanding how your role fits into a bigger system
Solving problems without being asked
7. How Credit and Debt Really Affect Your Life
This quietly shapes your options.
Credit scores = access (housing, loans, sometimes jobs)
Good debt vs. bad debt (and the gray area in between)
Why “minimum payment” is a trap
8. How to Make Decisions Without Perfect Information
Real life rarely gives certainty.
Make the best call with what you know
Adjust quickly instead of waiting too long
Avoiding paralysis by analysis
9. How Relationships Actually Work
Not just romantic—friends, coworkers, family.
Boundaries are learned, not assumed
Consistency > intensity
Most conflict is miscommunication, not malice
10. How Systems Around You Shape Outcomes
This is the hidden layer most people miss.
Incentives drive behavior (workplaces, schools, even friendships)
If something keeps going wrong, look at the system—not just the people
You can redesign parts of your life system over time

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