Age Wise
Why Older People Are So Much Happier
Once the slump of midlife is in the rearview, life opens up
Midlife can be miserable. You know it. I know it. Surveys show it. The pressures of raising a family, finding or keeping a job, paying the bills, dealing with emerging aches and pains — it all adds up.
But better days are ahead. Happiness, often measured as “life satisfaction,” typically charts out as a statistical smiley face, a U-shaped or J-shaped curve that’s high in young adulthood, pretty sucky for a couple of decades, then higher than ever in old age. A 2020 overview of the research across 132 countries puts the happiness low point at around age 47 or 48, on average, in both developing and advanced countries, and the phenomenon is not confined to the current generation of older people.
“The happiness curve is everywhere,” writes study leader David Blanchflower, PhD, a professor of economics at Dartmouth College.
The reasons for relative bliss in old age are many, anchored by lower levels of stress and responsibility and buoyed by free time and, if all goes well, the perspective and wisdom to put it to good use.