Someone Had To Say It
Somewhere between Instagram highlight reels and unsolicited timeline advice, turning 30 became a crisis. In this episode, Olaoluwa and Temitope unpack one of the most unnecessary sources of anxiety in a generation — the idea that if you haven't figured it all out by 30, you're somehow behind, late, or running out of time. In this episode we discuss: * Why do people act like turning 30 is entering senior citizenship? * How much of the "I'm already old" narrative is actually a social media creation? * Why do we celebrate people who make it early — but quietly ignore late bloomers with equally remarkable stories? * Is it even fair to expect a 25-year-old to have the results, the clarity, and the composure of someone twice their age? This episode is for you if: * You've ever felt behind simply because someone your age seems further ahead * You're in your 20s or 30s carrying anxiety about a timeline nobody actually agreed to * You know someone who needs permission to stop panicking about their age * You've celebrated an early success story but never stopped to ask what the pressure behind it cost 🎧 Listen on : 🎙️ Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/someone-had-to-say-it/id1798080321 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/J-taZteR5wU Are you where you thought you'd be at your age — and does it actually matter? Tell us in the comments. Someone Had to Say It — honest conversations about faith, culture, and the things most people think but never say out loud. #Is30TheNew60 #SomeonHadToSayIt #TurningThirty #LateBloomer #GenerationalAnxiety #SocialMediaPressure #NigerianPodcast #AgeAndSuccess #AfricanMillennials #YoungAndFiguredOut
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