|
RESEARCHERS OFFER EVIDENCE THAT FAMILIES MAKE US HAPPIER
15 May 2004 - University of Chicago
| Marriage mostly makes people happier, and a close family "inoculates" many kids against despair, according to long-term research. U.S. adults born in the 1920s were happier during the Depression if their parents had a strong marriage. |
Compared with equally deprived peers growing up in unhappy homes, "they were happier not only in childhood but adulthood, too," says University of North Carolina sociologist Glen Elder. A newer study of Iowa farm families with adolescents during the 1990s confirms that a good home can buffer youngsters against economic hardship. "These people were doing more poorly the longer they stayed in farming," says Elder, the study leader. But multi-generational closeness prevailed. "Grandparents would drive long distances just to see the kids in plays or at sporting events." The teens who grew up in hard times remain, overall, very happy as young adults, Elder says. "It's clear these strong relationships are a source of resilience for kids if there's not much money." Marriage per se, even if it's not such a great marriage, tends to improve well-being, says University of Chicago sociologist Linda Waite. In large surveys, 40 percent of the married say they're very happy, compared with 22 percent of the never married and 18 percent of previously married. Among those who live with a romantic partner, 24 percent are very happy; engaged couples are the only live-in partners as happy as married people, Waite says. There's some evidence that those who marry are happier to begin with, "but there's much stronger research showing that once adults marry, their well-being improves," she adds. She's analyzed large federal surveys that followed thousands of married people over five years. About 90 percent who say they're happily married have spouses who also are pleased with the marriage. The happily wed who ended up divorced five years later became much less happy. That's perhaps not surprising, Waite says. But the stunner is that about two-thirds who were unhappily married at the outset said they were happy five years later. Meanwhile, the unhappily married who had divorced five years later were no happier than those who stayed with their original spouse. The bottom line: "There's a certain plasticity in marriage, an up-and-down. A lot of problems resolve over time, and married people tend to get happier," Waite says. "It's a message some people disbelieve," she concedes, "but they have unrealistic ideas about marriage."
http://www-uchicago.edu
About: University of Chicago
The University of Chicago was founded in 1890 by the American Baptist Education Society and oil magnate John D. Rockefeller. The land for the new university, in the recently annexed suburb of Hyde Park, was donated by Marshall Field, owner of the Chicago department store that bears his name.In 1929, Robert Hutchins became the University's fifth president. During his tenure, Hutchins established many of the undergraduate curricular innovations that the University is known for today. These included a curriculum dedicated specifically to interdisciplinary education, comprehensive examinations instead of course grades, courses focused on the study of original documents and classic works, and an emphasis on discussion, rather than lectures. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, the University began to add modern buildings to the formerly all-Gothic campus. |
More News:
For May 2004
From University of Chicago
For University
|