Re: Old age is the happiestOn 25 Apr, 05:05, hab...@anony,com (habshi) wrote:
> Soon we will have drugs to reverse ageing and become unhappy
> again.
>
> excerpt time,com
> Newsflash for rock stars and teenagers: It turns out
> everything doesn't go downhill as we age — the golden years really are
> golden.
>
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> That's according to eye-opening research that found 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, pains and 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 the general public continues 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 aged 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 7
I just cant wait to grow old. LOL