Growing up poetry captures the bittersweet transformation from child to adult - the gradual loss of innocence, the awkward in-between years when you're too old for some things and too young for others, the moment you realize your parents are just people, the day you understand that childhood is behind you forever. These verses explore what we gain and lose in the process of maturing.
From scraped knees to broken hearts, from believing in magic to creating your own meaning, poetry about growing up reminds us that becoming an adult doesn't mean leaving behind who we were - it means integrating all our younger selves into who we are now. These poems honor the journey, celebrate resilience, and acknowledge that growing up is both a loss and a gift.
All the lasts we don't recognize until they're already past.
- Jennifer Morrison
The strange liminal space of almost-adult.
- Marcus Cole
Watching your child take the steps you once took, understanding what your parents felt.
- Sarah Chen-Williams
by Dylan Thomas (1945)
Thomas's lyrical celebration of childhood joy and the inevitable passage into adult awareness of time and mortality.
by A.E. Housman (1896)
A rueful acknowledgment of youthful folly and the hard-won wisdom that comes with experience.
- Virginia Woolf
- William Wordsworth
- George Bernard Shaw
- Ancient proverb
The loss of childhood wonder and what replaces it.
- Robert Kim
- Maria Santos
The hard-earned understanding that comes with experience.
- Diana Park
- James Freeman
Original and classic poems celebrating growth, resilience, and the everyday beauty of being alive.
Original and classic poems confronting loss, memory, and the quiet strength found in endings.
Poems that trace devotion, distance, and the enduring tenderness of human connection.