| In a recent column,
I talked about professor Jack Gesino’s views on how
to learn to be happy. Since then, several other articles and
books on the subject have come across my desk; perhaps it
is as a result of wars, natural disasters and the economy,
but it seems that research on, and advice about, being happy,
is the new hot topic.
A federally financed study is following about 200 couples
who will take part in a yearly marriage “checkup”
... similar to your preventative dental exam, it will attempt
to discover any weak spots in the relationship.
The hope is that couples can make changes in the way they
communicate so that problems can be solved before they sabotage
the marriage. Since this is a computer-savvy generation,
it should come as no surprise to learn that there are also
several online programs that offer help to couples.
One online study is based on “acceptance therapy,”
which focuses on better understanding of a partner’s
flaws ... a skill which I long ago acquired and at which,
any of the long-married couples pictured in the pages of
this paper, must surely excel.
Perhaps this should be a skill learned in pre-marriage
counseling; if we were aware of all of our partner’s
flaws in advance, many ill-advised marriages might never
take place. As a matter of fact, perhaps it would be the
final blow to marriage as an institution.
According to author and lecturer, Maggie Scarf, marriage
as an institution, has changed dramatically. I had the pleasure
of personally chatting with Maggie, a research specialist
on senior marriages, following her talk at the Institute
for Learning in Retirement’s annual luncheon.
Scarf says, “since the social ferment of the 1960s,
a number of alternatives to old-fashioned marriages have
emerged: sexual partners living together; out-of-wedlock
births; and single-parent child-rearing. All are now more
commonplace and acceptable.
“Couples enter wedlock with a more light-hearted
attitude (if it doesn’t work out, I can move on) and
there is now little social stigma in the wake of a divorce.
Paradoxically, it seems that the only people putting up
a desperate fight for the right to get married are members
of the gay community.”
What Scarf did find when she revisited the couples she
had interviewed 20 years previously for her “Intimate
Partners” book, was that for most of these senior
couples, this was the happiest period of their lives. Career
and child-rearing issues were over, their emotional processing
and control was improved and since they were now more fully
aware of the value of time, older adults arranged their
days in ways that made them happier. She has reported on
these senior couples in her book, “September Songs.”
I questioned what effect the current economy and loss of
work opportunities for some older couples had on the marriages
and she did admit that the majority of her happy couples
were professionals from the New England area and were financially
well off.
One interesting physical change as we age may also be responsible
for why we feel happier. According to the Lifespan Laboratory
in Stanford, Calif., the stress area of aging brains loses
cells while there are positive changes in the frontal area
of older brains that increase our sense of well being.
If you’ve gotten this far and still wonder how your
marriage is doing, Brigham Young University offers an extensive
online martial assessment called Relate. It reveals a couple’s
communication and conflict styles and costs less than $50.
For information, go to www.relate-institute.org.
As for me, assuming the unlikely luck of finding another
compatible companion, after 56 years of ups and downs, I’m
sticking with what I’ve got. The thought of re-adjusting
to anyone else is simply too exhausting.
Jean Cherni is founder of Senior
Living Solutions, a retirement advisory service. Contact
her at jeancherni@sbcglobal.net or 15 The Ponds, Branford
06405.
H. Pearce Company REALTORS®
is a full-service real estate company with more than 100
agents and branch offices in greater New Haven and the Shoreline.
Corporate and & Commercial offices are located in North
Haven, where the company was founded in 1958. All listings
can be found in color on the web at: www.hpearce.com. |