I'd say that after my father passed my writing changed, it went deeper. Most would say 'matured' but I don't think I'd use that word in relation to my progress. I think 'change' is a little more accurate.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I've always been quite mature because of the way my parents brought me up. They were very good at talking to me like a person rather than a baby, and I was around so many actors and directors from such a young age because my dad is an actor. I was more comfortable with adults rather than actually being an adult child.
With each year that's gone by, and as I grow up and get older, I've become more mature, of course, but you have a sense of who you are, and you find confidence in that.
Even when I think I'm writing really young, they say it's too mature.
As far as writing, it's grown because I've really grown comfortable with who I am.
It's easy to say you're more mature because all of a sudden you have a child, but it's a process.
I might add that you change as a person as you grow older, so you change as a writer, too.
I believe that maturity is not an outgrowing, but a growing up: that an adult is not a dead child, but a child who survived.
'Age' is the acceptance of a term of years. But maturity is the glory of years.
I have matured a lot.
I don't think people change. I think they definitely mature. But I think the essence of what I am today is the same as when I was five years old. It's just maturity. I've become a healthier, fuller expression of that essence.