The labels would be far more ridiculous and the list far longer. And the list only keeps growing, however, its recognizing how we identify ourselves versus what others identify us as such versus what we think others identify us as.
Moving on. We then grow into ourselves as adults - possibly still recognizing our identities as a "Student" and/or an "Athlete" but now opens the possibility for more; the more you have grown and accepted more labels and identities, the more your mind can handle and accept. The experience your mind has accumulated and absorbed over your very first 20 years of life have only shaped the identities you know and even the ones we don't always want to acknowledge. Meanwhile, you've turned into "Renter" and "Car Owner" and "Employee" and "Platinum Audible Member" and "Best Friend" and "Babysitter" and "Happy when you go out, but miserable when you're home alone" - At this point, you may have taken on "Drug Abuser" or "Alcoholic" or sometimes we try to put a happy spin on it and call ourselves "Heavy Partiers" and "Functioning Alcoholics" - but those are things that shape you, they make you struggle and force your mind to experience and try and push and fight. Your body always wants to survive, its literally your body's job - to keep the heart pumping, your brain running, your blood coursing, and your skin healing. And then through all of the experience and life changing moments that have altered how you see the world - still excluding how others identify you - "Girlfriend" becomes "Wife" and/or "Mother" and you become "Auntie" and "Homeowner" and there's always the possibility of "Divorcee" or "Widower" and so on and so forth.
The point to all of this is to break down all the roles you play in your life and how you create your existence surrounding them. This is okay, its normal to departmentalize who you are into these roles. When you're a "Mother", you're a different person then when you're out at Girl's Night and you're playing "Best Friend" - these roles identify and define the mass of who we are. And they keep adding and adding - new roles form and become a part of who you are. You just need to remember what roles are REAL and what roles are built in your mind because you were afraid or nervous or unsure. Don't let those roles overwhelm the reality of who you are, don't let them blind you. Old "Foes" might identify you as "Liar" but only you can recognize if that label is true to you or not. And don't be afraid of the truth. The truth opens your mind to the possibility of change or if you don't want to change, then ownership. Own who you are - but you have to recognize it and acknowledge it before that can ever happen.