Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Don't Worry, Be Happy: Alberta-Led Study Suggests Mid-Life Crisis A Myth

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 12:09 PM
    EDMONTON — No need to buy that Porsche if you're pushing 40.
     
    New research from the University of Alberta suggests there's no such thing as a mid-life crisis. It's more like mid-life bliss.
     
    The "Up, Not Down" study was published in the academic journal Developmental Psychology.
     
    It debunks the long-held belief that happiness declines between a person's teens and early 40s — or mid-life.
     
    Lead researcher and psychology professor Nancy Galambos says she found the opposite — that people in her study were happier in their early 40s than when they were in their late teens and early 20s.
     
    "I think it's because life is more difficult for younger people than for people in middle age," Galambos explains.
     
    She says some young adults are depressed, have trouble finding work and sorting out their lives.
     
    "There's a lot of uncertainty. But by middle age, a lot of people have worked that out and are quite satisfied through the earliest child-bearing years."
     
    Galambos says most studies looked at a groups of people of various ages. She says the U of A study surveyed the same people — 1,500 of them — over many years, and is more reliable.
     
    A group of Edmonton high schools students were tracked for 25 years and another group of graduating university students were followed for 14.
     
     
    They were all asked the same question at different ages: "How happy are you with your life?"
     
    On average, between ages 32 and 43, people experienced a slight dip in cheer.
     
    "But at both times of measurement, they were higher in happiness than they were in their late teens and early 20s," says Galambos. "They didn't lose their earlier gains and happiness."
     
    The study found happiness was higher in years when participants were married, in better health and had jobs.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Stressed Parents Can Make You Obese

    Stressed Parents Can Make You Obese
    Experiencing certain family stress repeatedly throughout the childhood can make kids obese by the time they turn 18, research has found.

    Stressed Parents Can Make You Obese

    Don't Get Jealous With Facebook Friends To Avoid Depression

    Don't Get Jealous With Facebook Friends To Avoid Depression
    Are you feeling depressed lately after spending most of your time on Facebook? Stop comparing yourself with successful peers and use the website only for sharing memories and information with new and old friends.

    Don't Get Jealous With Facebook Friends To Avoid Depression

    Accept Your Situation To Ward Off Frustration

    Accept Your Situation To Ward Off Frustration
    Unconscious acceptance of your current situation -- good or bad -- works better in regulating frustrating emotion, say researchers from Southwest University of China.

    Accept Your Situation To Ward Off Frustration

    Anxious, Slow Talkers Often Rejected For Job

    Anxious, Slow Talkers Often Rejected For Job
    You must exude warmth and be assertive during a job interview if you want to make a good impression, suggests a study. People who are anxious going into an interview often do not get hired, found the researchers.

    Anxious, Slow Talkers Often Rejected For Job

    Patience And Foresight Can Help You Save Money

    Patience And Foresight Can Help You Save Money
    People who find it hard to save money are often impatient and do not think about the long-term consequences of spending money, suggests a new research.

    Patience And Foresight Can Help You Save Money

    Sexual Identity Shift Early In Life Tied To Depression

    Sexual Identity Shift Early In Life Tied To Depression
    Gay, lesbian and bisexual people who initially were in heterosexual relations and did not report same-sex romantic attraction or relationships are more likely to experience depressive symptoms than others, a survey has found.

    Sexual Identity Shift Early In Life Tied To Depression