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Happiness in Old Age? |
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Emotionally, the best may be yet to come
Researchers are finding that older people are many times
happier than their younger counterparts. Life experience, passage of time
and emotional stability appear to be driving factors.
Los Angeles Times
October 15, 2007
For centuries, sages have alluded to a richness in life's later years that
is lost on the young. But only in the last decade have researchers begun to
measure happiness across the life span and, in doing so, try to understand
why older people tend to be so content.
The explanation doesn't appear to be biological -- some chemical in the
brain that mellows us just when all those plump neurons needed for thinking
and memory are shriveling up. Rather, most scientists now think that
experience and the mere passage of time gradually motivate people to
approach life differently. The blazing-to-freezing range of emotions
experienced by the young blends into something more lukewarm by later life,
numerous studies show. Older people are less likely to be caught up in their
emotions and more likely to focus on the positive, ignoring the negative.
"When you have that disaster at 10 in the morning, you can deal with it
better when you're older," says Stacey Wood, a neuropsychologist and
associate professor at Scripps College in Claremont. "With people in their
20s, it throws them off. They experience more emotion, and it's more intense
emotion."
In a study published in September in Psychological Science, Wood and her
collaborator, neuroscientist Michael Kisley of the University of Colorado,
recorded the brain activity of 63 adults, ranging in age, who were shown a
series of negative and positive images, such as dead animals or a bowl of
ice cream. Older adults were about 30% less reactive to the negative images
compared with the younger adults.
Other studies have found similar results -- that older people experience
negative emotion less often and recover from it more quickly. The insult
that has your blood boiling for three days at age 20 may not even register a
spike in blood pressure at age 60. And despite -- or perhaps because of --
the fact that anyone with gray hair has likely experienced his or her fair
share of suffering, older folks are also adept at transcending bad memories.
"What we see is a real difference in how negative information is processed
by the brain," Wood says. "When we talk about maturity or wisdom, we're
talking about that ability to integrate negative emotion or cognitive
information; being able to weigh it and not find it so disruptive."
Why people regulate their emotions better as they age may be due in part to
school-of-hard-knocks experience. Eventually they learn the world will not
end when the car breaks down or the child gets strep throat. The later
stages of life also offer more opportunities to actively avoid those parts
that are stressful or upsetting, Wood says.
"You can surround yourself with less negative people and events," she says.
"At a certain point, you're established in your career. You don't have to
put up with that annoying boss any more. You can structure your life the way
you want to."
Influence of time
One of the first researchers to discover that older people tend to be
happier thinks there's another reason for this greater emotional control.
It's linked to a person's sense of time. Older people are aware that life
doesn't last forever -- and, with a finite amount of time ahead, they think
it should be well spent.
In a study at Stanford University's Center on Longevity, psychologist Laura
Carstensen showed that people who perceived their future time as limited had
goals that were emotionally meaningful. People who perceived their futures
as open-ended had goals that tended to be knowledge-related. Carstensen
concluded that, as people age, they encounter "shrinking time horizons."
With less time left, people tend to focus on the now. The 2002 study was
published in the journal Psychology and Aging.
"As people come to appreciate the fragility of life, they tend to put more
value on it," she says.
Younger people may anticipate that the older years will be bleak because the
body fails and the mind is aware that time is running out. But older people
typically aren't depressed by that.
"The paradox of aging is that there is this decline in physical well-being
and cognitive status and yet an increase in psychological well-being,"
Carstensen says. "We [colleagues in her laboratory] don't think of that as a
paradox, of course, because it's the decline that reminds people that life
will not go on forever."
With an eye on the clock, older people are more selective about their
activities and relationships, Wood says. The happiest find ways to feel
useful, giving them a sense of purpose and making their time feel
meaningful. The happiest tend to say they enjoy serving others in some
capacity.
"I think of old age as the richest form of emotional satisfaction that is
possible," Carstensen says. "There are still positive emotions, but there is
also an understanding and appreciation that there is an ending around the
corner."
An appreciation of remaining time leads older people to be more grateful for
what they have, Carstensen and other researchers say. And being thankful is
great for mental health. Studies by Robert A. Emmons, a psychology professor
at UC Davis, show that people who focus on what they are grateful for have
better emotional well-being, especially a positive mood, compared with
people who focus on the negative or neutral information.
"When you focus on gratefulness, you see that other people are providing you
with support and value you," says Emmons, author of the book "Thanks! How
the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier." "You see that good stuff
doesn't just happen randomly. It helps you make sense out of life. Grateful
people see their lives as gifts."
Being able to forgive is the flip side, he adds. "It helps reduce negative
emotions like anger and resentment."
That's why neurotics, who get stuck on life's hurts, may be among the few
personality types that don't mellow with age, Carstensen says. Neurotics are
people who "keep going back to the same negative relationships and the same
negative thoughts. They don't change," she says.
In fact, individual temperament is still the best predictor of happiness
overall, Wood says. A child who is always smiling will likely be joyful
decades later. The grumpy 30-year-old will likely be a grumpy, if slightly
less so, 70-year-old.
A pleasant surprise
Why does the idea of being most happy in old age come as a shock to young
and old alike? Psychological science has a reason for that too. We humans
are terrible at predicting what will make us happy.
Younger people tend to think that happiness is getting what you want: a
fabulous body, great job, true love, a nice place to live and a good ride.
No one should dismiss the hopeful dreams of the young, but it's just not
that simple, Wood says.
"We try to make decisions that make us happy, but we're not good at doing
that," she says.
Well-known research shows that a sudden increase in wealth doesn't correlate
to long-term gains in happiness, and people who become paralyzed due to
accidents return from despair to their previous levels of happiness. Parents
assume they will be bereft when the kids leave home, but happiness and
marital satisfaction typically improve.
Aging too falls into that puzzling category in which reality often defies
expectations.
"Why is it that when we think of age, we think about all the bad things that
will happen?" says Dr. Peter Ubel, director of the Center for Behavioral and
Decision Sciences in Medicine at the University of Michigan, who has studied
happiness among ill and older people. "That is one of the reasons we don't
anticipate happiness in aging very well."
Until recently, psychological study focused almost solely on life's
negatives: bad behavior, troubled relationships, depression and stress.
Today, researchers are also studying so-called positive psychology -- those
factors that help people thrive mentally and emotionally.
The study of elder happiness has been a fruitful foray in positive
psychology, experts say, showing that older people are happier if they stay
socially connected, pursue new experiences and do things that make them feel
useful.
Young can benefit too
Such research offers lessons for younger people as well. Teaching
adolescents and young adults about the joys of volunteer work and community
service may pry them from the self-centeredness that contemporary society
reinforces, Emmons says.
"We live in a culture where people expect certain entitlements; 'I'm owed
these things,' or 'I deserve these things,' " Emmons says. "It goes against
the spirit of having a sense of purpose and being useful."
Similarly, teaching a child to count his or her blessings might place that
child on an elevated happiness trajectory that persists throughout life, he
suggests.
The rare younger people who experience the rich happiness common to their
elders may be those who have recovered from life-threatening illness or
addiction, Carstensen says. She cites research that shows people often feel
differently about their lives after surviving a serious illness. They have
come face-to-face with the "shrinking time horizon" that older people
routinely live with.
"As people come to appreciate the fragility of life, they tend to put more
value on it," she says. "There is something about recognizing our own
mortality."
Combining the mental shrewdness of youth with the ability to savor life
might be a successful recipe for contented living -- whatever one's age.
"If only younger people could step out of themselves and focus on the
positive and realize life is fragile and life is valuable," Carstensen says.
"And if older people could think about the future and worry a little bit
more, that's probably good."
For example, elderly people may be too trusting. They are the most likely to
be victims of financial scams, and they may make bad healthcare or financial
decisions because they fail to think critically through the pros and cons of
a situation.
Freedom to grow old
Elders will probably always have the last laugh, Carstensen says. Young
people typically don't have the freedom to be as choosy about their
activities and relationships. They have to show deference to the professor,
please the boss, network with business acquaintances, discipline the toddler
and beg the banker for a mortgage.
"That is what goes on in youth," she says. "Younger people have to prepare
for a long, nebulous future. That is anxiety-producing. I'm not sure it
would be adaptive for young people to say, 'I'm not going to worry about the
future,' because you do have to worry about the future.' "
As people age, they are gradually relieved of the burden of planning for the
future, she notes.
In the words of the psychologically astute British poet Robert Browning:
"Grow old along with me! The best is yet to be, The last of life, for which
the first was made."
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Happiness in Old Age Depends on Attitude
Happiness in old age may have more to do with attitude than
actual health, a new study suggests.
LiveScience Managing Editor
12 December 2005
Researchers examined 500 Americans age 60 to 98 who live independently and
had dealt with cancer, heart disease, diabetes, mental health conditions or
a range of other problems. The participants rated their own degree of
successful aging on scale of 1-10, with 10 being best.
Despite their ills, the average rating was 8.4.
"What is most interesting about this study is that people who think they are
aging well are not necessarily the (healthiest) individuals," said lead
researcher Dilip Jeste of the University of California at San Diego.
"In fact, optimism and effective coping styles were found to be more
important to successfully aging than traditional measures of health and
wellness," Jeste said. "These findings suggest that physical health is not
the best indicator of successful aging—attitude is."
The finding may prove important for the medical community, which by
traditional measures would have considered only 10 percent of the study
members to be aging successfully.
"The commonly used criteria suggest that a person is aging well if they have
a low level of disease and disability," Jeste said. "However, this study
shows that self-perception about aging can be more important than the
traditional success markers."
Health and happiness may indeed be largely in the mind. A study released
last year found that people who described themselves as highly optimistic a
decade ago had lower rates of death from cardiovascular disease and lower
overall death rates than strong pessimists. Research earlier this year
revealed that the sick and disabled are often as happy as anyone else.
The new study also showed that people who spent time each day socializing,
reading or participating in other hobbies rated their aging satisfaction
higher.
"For most people, worries about their future aging involve fear of physical
infirmity, disease or disability," Jeste said. "However, this study is
encouraging because it shows that the best predictors of successful aging
are well within an individual's control."
The results, announced today, were reported at a meeting of the American
College of Neuropsychopharmacology.
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