Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

With Age, We Tend To Choose Friends Over Family

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2017 11:15 PM
    A new research by a Michigan State University scholar showed that the power of friendship gets stronger with age and may even be more important than family relationships.
     
    In a pair of studies involving nearly 280,000 people, William Chopik found that friendships become increasingly important to one's happiness and health across the lifespan. Not only that, but in older adults, friendships are actually a stronger predictor of health and happiness than relationships with family members.
     
    "Friendships become even more important as we age," said Chopik. "Keeping a few really good friends around can make a world of difference for our health and well-being. So it's smart to invest in the friendships that make you happiest."
     
    For the first study, Chopik analyzed survey information about relationships and self-rated health and happiness from 271,053 participants of all ages from nearly 100 countries. The second study looked at data from a separate survey about relationship support/strain and chronic illness from 7,481 older adults in the United States.
     
    According to the first study, both family and friend relationships were linked to better health and happiness overall, but only friendships became a stronger predictor of health and happiness at advanced ages.
     
     
    The second study also showed that friendships were very influential - when friends were the source of strain, participants reported more chronic illnesses; when friends were the source of support, participants were happier.
     
    Chopik said that may be because of the optional nature of relationships - that over time, we keep the friends we like and make us feel good and discard the rest. Friends also can provide a source of support for people who don't have spouses or for those who don't lean on family in times of need. Friends can also help prevent loneliness in older adults who may experience bereavement and often rediscover their social lives after they retire.
     
    Family relationships are often enjoyable too, Chopik said, but sometimes they involve serious, negative and monotonous interactions.
     
    Friendships often take a "back seat" in relationships research, Chopik added, which is strange, especially considering that they might be more influential for our happiness and health than other relationships.
     
    "Friendships help us stave off loneliness but are often harder to maintain across the lifespan," he said. "If a friendship has survived the test of time, you know it must be a good one - a person you turn to for help and advice often and a person you wanted in your life."
     
    The study appears in the journal Personal Relationships.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Book V/s Kindle

    Book V/s Kindle
    Paper or plasma – if you’re a reader, this question has plagued you at least once in your life. But which is better? 

    Book V/s Kindle

    Have some fun this summer

    Have some fun this summer

    Like most things in Vancouver, summer activities often come with a price tag! If you want to make...

    Have some fun this summer

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

      While the apology marks a historic and significant moment in Canadian history and can ...

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress
    Offering new evidence to show that male and female brains are wired differently, new research has found that a brain region involved with stress and keeping heart rate and blood pressure high work differently in men and women.

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages
    Young performers recognized by the TD Niagara Jazz Festival

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!
    This year, once again the audiences were entertained to inspiring, and engaging performances by toddlers of four to seniors at eighty-four.

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!