Geelong Advertiser

Grumpy old men thing of the past

- SUSIE O’BRIEN

FORGET about grumpy old men. Baby Boomer males are the most optimistic and Generation Y female the most pessimisti­c, a survey of 1000 Australian adults shows.

Day-to-day issues such as health, work-life balance and relationsh­ips are more important in determinin­g a person’s outlook than terrorism, global war, climate change and politics, according to the Australian Unity Optimism Study.

It shows 68 per cent of men are optimists compared with 57 per cent of women.

“If men are from Mars and women are from Venus, then Mars must be a happier place. The study shows there are almost one million more optimistic men than optimistic women in Australia,” Australian Unity spokeswoma­n Laura Jennings said.

“It’s the personal things that we can generally control that have a big impact on Australian­s’ optimism levels. Factors including health and enjoyment of life have a far greater impact on how positive we feel,” she said.

The study shows Baby Boomers are more optimistic than gen Xers and Gen Ys, men at every age are more optimistic than women, and people from Victoria are the most optimistic of all.

Hugh van Cuylenburg, founder of The Resilience Project, said he wasn’t surprised Gen Y females are the least positive.

“It’s evident women set themselves much higher standards than men. I see this every day in the schools, workplaces and sporting clubs I work with,” he said.

“When women don’t reach these standards they’re hard on themselves and this is clearly impacting on their levels of optimism”.

But Mr Cuylenburg said the good news was that “anyone can rewire their brain to scan the world for the positive”.

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