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Old age is the happiest

Reply from: habshi
Date: 25 Apr 2008, 02:05
Old age is the happiest

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


Reply from: baani
Date: 25 Apr 2008, 15:13
Re: Old age is the happiest

On 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.
>
> Related Articles
>
> It’s a Glad, Sad, Mad World
> It’s probably impossible for most Americans even to begin to
> understand how it must feel to live in ...
> Is Our Happiness Preordained?
> Though most of us spend a lifetime pursuing happiness, new research is
> showing that that goal may be...
> A Vision of Ourselves
> The potential significance of Hiroshima was never lost on Americans.
> Even bathed in the kissing and ...
> From The Medical Desk
> Federal health officials say 81% of U.S. toddlers are being vaccinated
> on time; Massachusetts does b...
>
> 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




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