In many societies, age, size, or perceived maturity are often used consciously or unconsciously as markers of competence and wisdom. Older individuals are assumed to know more. Taller or more physically developed people are often expected to take the lead. And maturity, often equated with age, is mistaken as proof of skill, discipline, or intelligence.
But time and time again, life reveals a deeper truth: competence and knowledge are not bound by age, physical stature, or even the number of years someone has lived.
Experience ≠ Expertise
It’s easy to assume that someone older has more to offer simply because they’ve been around longer. While experience can bring insight, it doesn't always translate to capability. Some people go through life repeating the same mistakes, avoiding growth, or staying in their comfort zones. On the other hand, there are young individuals who push boundaries, learn rapidly, and apply knowledge with a level of precision and creativity that surpasses their seniors.
We’ve all encountered older individuals who lack adaptability, critical thinking, or even basic interpersonal skills. And we’ve also met teenagers who build apps, solve complex problems, lead teams, and think with surprising depth and clarity.
The digital age has further shattered the myth that competence is earned only with age. With the vast availability of information online, a 15-year-old today can have access to more technical knowledge than a university professor did two decades ago. Young minds are building startups, creating art, engineering solutions, and leading global movements.
This doesn’t mean age brings nothing of value it certainly brings context, perspective, and often emotional resilience. But competence is about how you use what you know, not how long you’ve been around. This too doesn't discredit the people who have harnessed knowledge and experience over the years. Notably a lot of them are evolving with technology, sharpening their skills each century
Respecting elders is a cultural value in many parts of the world and rightfully so. But respecting age should not mean blindly equating it with authority or superiority. We must learn to differentiate between respect for a person and recognition of competence, even the bible has given countless examples of that
Leadership, innovation, and expertise can come from anywhere. If we allow outdated biases to cloud our judgment, we risk overlooking valuable contributions simply because of the face or frame it comes in.
Competence Is Earned, Not Assumed
Competence is built through learning, practice, curiosity, and the courage to try and fail. It has nothing to do with your age or how grown-up you look. The world is filled with old but incompetent individuals just as it’s filled with young, brilliant minds waiting to be heard.
Let’s evaluate people based on what they know, how they apply it, and how they grow not on how many candles were on their last birthday cake.