The Day

Study: Age no longer bringing happiness

- By MARTHA IRVINE

Are you happy? If you’re in your 30s or older, a new study has found that you’re less likely to answer “yes” than your parents were.

The findings, published online Thursday in the journal Social Psychologi­cal and Personalit­y Science, come on the heels of another recent report that found that death rates of middle-aged white Americans have been rising, largely due to suicide and substance abuse.

“Age is supposed to bring happiness and contentmen­t. For that not to be true anymore is somewhat shocking,” says Jean Twenge, a professor at San Diego State University who is the study’s lead author.

Starting with data in the early 1970s, Twenge and her colleagues found that adults 30 and older used to be happier than younger adults and teens. But that “happiness advantage” has steadily declined as the older adults have expressed less satisfacti­on with their lives and the young have gotten a little happier.

Other experts who study happiness say the findings fit with their own research. They attribute the shift to everything from growing financial pressures to the fact that real life has been a rude awakening for a generation of young adults who were told they could do anything and are discoverin­g that often isn’t true.

Before you get too bummed out, consider another finding of the study: One in three of all American adults still report being “very happy.”

Twenge and her colleagues found, for instance, that 30 percent of those in the 18- to 29-year-old range gave that response in the 2010s, compared with 28 percent in the early 1970s.

There’s also been a notable uptick in “very happy” teens. In the 1970s, for instance, 19 percent of 12th graders chose that response, compared with 23 percent in the 2010s.

Adults age 30 and older, however, have seen a five-percentage-point drop, from 38 percent in the early 1970s to 33 percent today.

The findings — which are from University of Chicago’s longstandi­ng General Social Survey and the University of Michigan’s Monitoring the Future survey — ring true for Emily Valdez, a 49-year-old mom in Seattle.

“I thought that life would be simpler,” she says. “My parents’ marriage, children, child-rearing just seemed — and still seems in their eyes — less fraught with indecision, second-guessing and maybe just less insecurity.”

It is impossible to ignore the economic downturn in the last decade. Shigehiro Oishi, a researcher at the University of Virginia, has documented a growing dissatisfa­ction with the widening gap between the wealthy and everyone else.

Others have linked unhappines­s to “income insecurity.”

Twenge, the study’s author, also said that, beyond income factors, people who were single parents, and presumably had fewer social supports, said they were less happy. She and her co-authors also speculated that young people were less stressed by economic factors until they hit adulthood.

In addition, Tim Bono, a psychologi­st at Washington University who teaches and studies happiness, thinks there’s something to that “rude awakening” theory for his generation of young adults.

The 32-year-old professor recently came across a box of school papers and other relics from his past — worksheets, assignment­s and notes sent home that reinforced “how special I was and how I could do anything I set my mind to.” He also found ribbons and trophies he’d received as a kid, not only for winning but for simply participat­ing.

“My generation has been bathed in messages of how great we are and how anything is possible for us,” Bono says, noting that that mindset can easily lead to disappoint­ment.

A 30-year-old father from Texas, who served in the Army before enrolling at the University of Puget Sound in Washington, Daniel Trapp says his life experience has helped him feel happier than some of his peers, “despite the stress that I have in my life.”

But he’s also noticed “a delay in acceptance of an adult role” from his fellow college students, some of whom have chosen graduate school to avoid the working world.

Others wonder if younger adults should get more credit.

“Some accuse the so-called Millennial­s of this kind of avoidance, while others point to research and anecdotal evidence that Millennial­s aren’t in denial, they just are smarter, more connected with each other and more hopeful about changing things,” says Michael Simon, a psychother­apist in New Orleans.

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