About five birds lived in a big nest in a huge tree with other types of species living in the same tree and more within the area. The mother and father birds would their children to fly out of the nest and find new places to visit while coming back when the days over. This is to learn how to go off on their own to have the instincts to survive on their own and potentially start their own family if they wanted to. The only issue was that the younger birds were already adults who still lived in the nest. It was to a point where they were growing mentally at a slower pace compared to other offspring birds in trees. The others birds surrounding them were learning much more about young adulthood while the sibling birds were still living in the parents nest taking up a lot of space. When the parents occasionally asked why don’t they want to be independent for their own, the common answers would be that they had everything they could need around them. Food can be found nearby, along with water, and a home. When they were younger, they would learn the basics like flying around their home for short distances and time and gliding to hard to reach places if it were a bigger height. Putting off separating themselves from the family to be on their own was the main issue for the past few years now. Were they not ready to be on their own? Or do they not know where to start? Was the issue not fully knowing how to begin making their own homes somewhere in a new environment? All of these things were pondered from all of them. However the short answer is that they were extremely slow learners in a lot of things which limited their social and mental growth for a good period of time. There was also a thought of the parent birds not being ready for them to leave and visa versa. One things for sure, it will happen one day. Each of them will leave the nest one by one out of the blue or discussing it beforehand. Will the parents miss their children? Will they be ready for that day to come? Even when they’re on their own one day, the children birds will come by once in awhile to see their family.