The oldest Americans are also the happiest, research finds

By LINDSEY TANNER
The Associated Press, April 19, 2008
http://tinyurl.com/4z465r


CHICAGO -- It turns out the golden years really are golden.
Eye-opening new research finds the happiest Americans are the oldest,
and older adults are more socially active than the stereotype of the
lonely senior suggests. The two go hand-in-hand: Being social can help
keep away the blues.

"The good news is that with age comes happiness," said study author
Yang Yang, a University of Chicago sociologist. "Life gets better in
one's perception as one ages."

A certain amount of distress in old age is inevitable, including aches
and pains and the deaths of loved ones and friends. But older people
generally have learned to be more content with what they have than
younger adults, Yang said.

This is partly because older people have learned to lower their
expectations and accept their achievements, said Duke University aging
expert Linda George. An older person may realize "it's fine that I was
a schoolteacher and not a Nobel prize winner."

George, who was not involved in the new study, believes the research
is important because people tend to think that "late life is far from
the best stage of life, and they don't look forward to it."

Yang's findings are based on periodic face-to-face interviews with a
nationally representative sample of Americans from 1972 to 2004. About
28,000 people ages 18 to 88 took part.

There were ups and downs in overall happiness levels during the study,
generally corresponding with good and bad economic times. But at every
stage, older Americans were the happiest.

While younger blacks and poor people tended to be less happy than
whites and wealthier people, those differences faded as people aged.

In general, the odds of being happy increased 5 percent with every 10
years of age.

Overall, about 33 percent of Americans reported being very happy at
age 88, versus about 24 percent of those age 18 to their early 20s.
And throughout the study years, most Americans reported being very
happy or pretty happy. Less than 20 percent said they were not too happy.

A separate University of Chicago study found that about 75 percent of
people aged 57 to 85 engage in one or more social activities at least
every week. Those include socializing with neighbors, attending
religious services, volunteering or going to group meetings.

Those in their 80s were twice as likely as those in their 50s to do at
least one of these activities.

Both studies appear in April's American Sociological Review.

"People's social circles do tend to shrink a little as they age _ that
is mainly where that stereotype comes from, but that image of the
isolated elderly really falls apart when we broaden our definition of
what social connection is," said study co-author Benjamin Cornwell,
also a University of Chicago researcher.

The research rings true for 81-year-old George O'Hare, a retired Sears
manager in Willowbrook, Ill. He's active with church and AARP and does
motivational speaking, too. His wife is still living, and he's close
to his three sons and four grandchildren.

"I'm very happy because I've made friends that are still living,"
O'Hare said. "I like to go out and speak in schools about motivation."

"Happiness is getting out and being with people, and that's why I
recommend it," he said.

Ilse Siegler, an 84-year-old retired nurse manager in Chicago, has a
slightly different perspective. Her husband died 35 years ago, and she
says she still misses him every day.

She has vision problems and has slowed down with age. Yet she still
swims, runs a social group in her condo building, volunteers in a
retirement home and is active with her temple. These all help "make
life more enjoyable," she said.

While Siegler said these aren't the happiest years of her life, she's
content.

"Contentment as far as I'm concerned comes with old age ... because
you accept things the way they are," she said. "You know that nothing
is perfect."

Cornwell's nationally representative study was based on in-home
interviews with 3,005 people in 2005 and 2006. While it didn't include
nursing home residents, only about 4 percent of Americans aged 75 to
84 are in nursing homes, Cornwell said.

It's all good news for the aging population. However, Yang's study
also found that baby boomers were the least happy. They could end up
living the unfortunate old-age stereotype if they can't let go of
their achievement-driven mind-set, said George, the Duke aging expert.

So far, baby boomers aren't lowering their aspirations at the same
rate earlier generations did. "They still seem to believe that they
should have it all," George said. "They're still thinking about having
a retirement that's going to let them do everything they haven't done
yet."

Previous research also has shown that mid-life tends to be the most
stressful time, said Cornell University sociologist Elaine Wethington.
"Everyone's asking you to do things and you have a lot to do. You're
less happy because you feel hassled."

The new studies show "if you can make it through that," there's light
at the end of the tunnel, Wethington said.





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