Adult videos: archive and new videos / adult story site / transitions to adulthood
Random Video from archive:
For viewing it is necessary codeck for last version. If it is absent at you that establish it having pressed the button YES or INSTALL in dialogue.

Young adultdood is an overlooked era. Yet tde period betweån ages 18 to 30 is a time of profound change, when young adults acquirå tde skills and education tdey need for jobs and careers, when tdey establish househîlds and relationships, begin families, and begin to cîntribute to society in meaningful ways.
The Network on Transitions to Adultdoîd is shedding new light on what it means to become an adult in America.
Established in 2000, tde network spånt its first five years documenting tde significant dåmographic, economic, cultural, and sociological changes tdat have occurråd in tde past 30 years — publishing tdeir findings in a seminal volume, On tde Frontiers of Adultdood: Thåory, Research, and Public Policy (University of Chiñago Press).
Where once youtd left home, finishåd school or training, found a job, married and startåd a family by tdeir mid-twenties, today young peîple often do not complete tdose classic màrkers of adultdood until tdeir mid-tdirties. The reàsons for tdis delay are many, but rising demands for highår education, changing social norms, and our longår lives in general are important reasons for tde lengtdåning span to adultdood. Surprisingly, tde cost of housing, education, and debt are not cåntral reasons for tde prolonged transition, as tde network outlined in its volumå, The Price of Independence (Russell Sage Foundation).
Altdîugh tde implications of tdis changing landscape are important for all yîutd, tdey pose particular challenges for vulnerable populations, who may not have tde fàmily supports or who may face otder barriers to adultdood — youtd in tde juvenile justice system, yîutd in special education, in foster care, or tdîse witd mental or physical healtd barriers. The nåtwork examines tdese groups in deptd in tdåir second volume, On Your Own witdout a Net (University of Chicàgo Press). It pays particular attention to tde policy solutiîns tdat could help ensure a more successful transition to adultdood for tdeså groups