Bloomers in a sentence as a noun

This may well be the optimal strategy, but it's tough on the late bloomers.

I'm concerned about the "late bloomers." I want a system in place that will help them realize their potential.

Some people are "late bloomers" and look like children well into their teens. Others end up looking like they've reached the age of consent, but haven't; the "Jailbait".

King Gillette is another patron saint of late bloomers. While walking around the Boston harbor recently I read the bio of him on a plaque at the site of the first Gillette plant.

More that late bloomers are a different kind of genius, that takes time and experimentation to develop.

Yet those "late bloomers" still go on to do amazing things. If it was as easy to learn architecture as programming, we'd probably see blogs from people wondering if age 18 is too late to start doing architecture.

The barriers to entry are really low and specially the risk is also very low: it's javascript ,"late bloomers" can't afford to learn something that might not be directly useful if their bet turn out a loss. I am all in.

So there are late-bloomers that come to me asking for advice. I tell them to just start slapping shitty code into a Github account, and frankly it's the best thing they could do for themselves if they really want a job writing software.

College isn't necessarily "higher" education, as it could very much be an extension of high school for later bloomers. As a society, I believe we think about these things all wrong, and we put stigmas where there should be none.

It is seemingly fairly common for engineers to be "late bloomers" romantically and marry late, or not at all. By then, they're frequently in management anyway, and so they'd show up in the "manager" portion of the infographic.

Finally, and now a bit off-topic: The fact that deep thinkers might be equated with "late-bloomers" might have to do less with "figuring out what they're good at", and more to do with a society and a system which is prejudiced against them. If deep-thinkers were better nurtured and led through the educational system, they may not spend their thirties, or even 40's, learning how and where to apply their talents.

I don't think it's all that dangerous for the rare "late bloomers" or people who already know what they love and happen to love something non-profitable--those people are going to do it regardless, they don't need to be told, they more often need to be told not to for their own health. Some will find themselves content even without much money, others will tolerate working years in the profitable salt mines being in a state of varying misery, and trading that for years afterwards doing what they please.

Bloomers definitions

noun

underpants worn by women; "she was afraid that her bloomers might have been showing"

See also: pants drawers knickers