4 points
*

They’re in a good mood.

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-17 points

What stories are you watching?!

Also, childhood is hard compared to being an adult?! Give me a break.

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28 points

The entire point of the comic is trying to draw parallels, not dividers. Growing up has hardships, just like being grown up does. Trying to make one or the other seem easier or harder is a foolish and/or selfish endeavor. Theyre as different as they are similar, so trying to weigh them against each other is nothing but an ego-stroking contest.

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18 points

Which stories are being criticized here? I can’t think of any examples of this kind of coming of age story.

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27 points

I can’t come up with examples from modern popular culture, but I do remember the C.S. Lewis novels in the Narnia series often ending that way, as though the battles in Narnia were somehow less real. But those stories are a bit niche at this point.

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Aslan didn’t allow the oldest girl into “heaven” with the other kids in the last book because she… checks notes… wore makeup and liked boys. C S Lewis got reeeal puritanical towards the end of that series.

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6 points

That’s not a great representation, she didn’t die in the train crash because she became distant from her family, so since she’s still alive on earth she’s obviously not going to “heaven”.

There is a one off line about those being her interests which was a weird choice, but it’s not like she went to wardrobe hell lol

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4 points

Didn’t they age into adults in Narnia and ruled there? Then they went home and it was only a few minutes and then they all died as kids at the end, so they didn’t so much “lose their powers” as they just straight up died lol. Been a long time since I’ve read the books though.

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20 points
*

Pretty clear that Digimon is one. Which links it to childhood and seems to have a sad/bittersweet ending multiple times. (though averted/retconned for 2 incarnations.)

Not entirely about lost powers but see the Growing Up Sucks trope (and the example subpages)

The concept of “childhood’s end” will probably be clearly illustrated, with the now-grown-up character losing something that was fundamental to their happiness as a child.

The child may lose his guardians, Mons, or even his powers, if these all come with a time limit or are directly linked to his status as a child. For example, children are assumed to be wide-eyed, curious, innocent and trusting; adults are usually portrayed as pragmatic, cynical and set in their ways.

A recurring theme in Hayao Miyazaki’s films

Sometimes it might be subtle, and sometimes the time limit is an open/common reminder such as Fairly Odd Parents (lose+forget fairies after turning 18, though it being a long-running show I don’t know if they even actually ended on that note).

@elbarto777

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6 points

Locke & Key has the forgetting magic when becoming an adult trope.

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12 points
*

Most magic stories about getting your powers before adulthood hits. Wednesday, Harry Potter, magic school, almost any magic series you search in both Netflix and prime, If you don’t start sensing it before you hit x age you’re not magical just ordinary. It really overplays on the crushing potential older people put on younger people too. This is pretty much all YA formula in books and what has been converted from YA books

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5 points

The Disney Channel series Wizards of Waverly Place has all the kids competing to keep their magic powers when they enter adulthood

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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35 points

Can’t have kids entering adulthood with any ideas about changing or helping the world. Much better for business if they give up all those hopes and just get a job.

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7 points

They’d better get a job, caring for a walrus isn’t cheap.

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6 points

The smiles are priceless, but the wall repair bill for tusk marks is higher than you’d expect.

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6 points

Even if they did have ideas, there’s a good chance they’d still get pushed into a confined and dehumanizing existence.

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4 points

Still better to try than not imo

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2 points
*

Yeah, but I can kind of get why some fiction might want to frame adulthood more in the direction of tapering expectations with a “sordid lament over losing the parts of yourself you like” since that’s totally realistic

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