Libmonster ID: KE-1681

Infantilism in Adults: The Phenomenon of the "Eternal Child" in Psychology and Society

Infantilism in adulthood is not just a casual term to describe a frivolous person, but a complex psychological and socio-adaptive phenomenon. It is characterized by the retention of traits, behavioral patterns, and thinking styles typical of earlier age periods in an adult. In scientific discourse, this phenomenon is often referred to as psychosocial immaturity or personal immaturity, indicating its comprehensive nature, affecting the emotional, volitional, and social spheres.

Key Characteristics: Beyond Capriciousness

Infantilism manifests not in individual actions, but in systemic characteristics of the personality:

  1. Emotional regulation (affective immaturity): Infantrial adults are characterized by emotional lability — rapid, intense, often inadequate emotional reactions to situations (tantrums, grievances, elations). The external locus of control prevails: blame for failures is attributed to external circumstances ("the boss is nitpicking", "others are lucky"), while successes are ascribed to oneself. The ability for deferred gratification and patience is minimal. An interesting fact: neurobiological research suggests a possible link between such traits and less active prefrontal cortex, responsible for impulse control and long-term planning.

  2. Cognitive style: Thinking is characterized by egocentrism — difficulty in taking the perspective of another person. The world is perceived through the prism of one's own desires and needs. Magical thinking is present — belief that desired things can happen spontaneously without effort, or through external forces ("it will all work out", "they will save me").

  3. Social and volitional sphere: There is a lack of clear personal self-determination, life goals are vague or borrowed. There is a hyper-reliance on the social environment (parents, partner, friends) in solving everyday, financial, and emotional tasks. Responsibility for one's life, health, and well-being is delegated to others. A vivid example is the so-called kidults — adults who consciously cultivate childhood interests (comics, video games, collectible toys), which in itself is not a pathology, but in combination with a refusal to take on adult social roles, becomes a marker of it.

Etiology: Why an Adult Remains a Child?

The causes of infantilism are multifaceted and often have a combined nature:

  • Family upbringing: The most studied factor. This is overprotection ("nurture in a greenhouse") where parents shield the child from any difficulties, or, conversely, authoritarian control, suppressing initiative and not allowing to learn to make independent decisions. The parental attitude "the most important is to study well, we will do the rest for you" programs the inability to solve practical life tasks.

  • Socio-cultural context: Modern consumer society and the cult of effortless success (myths about startups, "success stories" on social networks) encourage hedonism and quick results. The cult of youth and beauty as the highest value also indirectly devalues traditional "adult" virtues: wisdom, experience, patience. Economic instability and the extension of the period of education (up to 25 years and later) objectively prolong the period of social and financial dependence on parents.

  • Psychological trauma: Sometimes infantilism is a form of psychological defense (regression). Facing severe trauma or chronic stress in adulthood (divorce, job loss, illness), a person unconsciously "regresses" to a safer earlier stage of development where others were responsible for them.

Social consequences and "secondary gains"

Infantilism has serious social costs. For the individual, it is chronic frustration (the world does not correspond to childhood expectations), instability in life, unstable relationships (the partner gets tired of playing the "parent" role), professional unfulfillment. For society, it is an economic burden (supporting adult dependents), demographic risks (refusal to create a family as excessive responsibility), low social and civic activity.

However, this state has hidden benefits (secondary gains) that support its existence: the ability to avoid the anxiety associated with making decisions, to avoid responsibility for failures, and to receive care and attention from others.

Therapy: The Path to Maturity

Overcoming infantilism is not "correcting the character", but a complex psychological work, often requiring the help of a psychotherapist. Its goals:

  1. Insight: The client must see the connection between their childhood behavioral patterns and current life difficulties.

  2. Development of emotional intelligence: Learn to identify, experience, and regulate their emotions, rather than act under their influence.

  3. Formation of an internal locus of control: Taking responsibility for one's life, understanding that results depend on one's own actions.

  4. Skills training: Developing the ability for independent planning, decision-making, and overcoming obstacles.

Thus, adult infantilism is not laziness or whimsy, but a deficit of psychosocial competencies formed by a complex of family, personal, and social factors. This is an adaptive but destructive strategy in the long term, allowing to avoid challenges of adult life, but doomed to dependence and dissatisfaction. The way out of it lies in a painful but necessary mastery of the "musculature of responsibility" and integration of rejected adult roles into the structure of the personality.


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Infantilism in adults // Nairobi: Kenya (LIBRARY.KE). Updated: 02.12.2025. URL: https://library.ke/m/articles/view/Infantilism-in-adults (date of access: 17.01.2026).

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