{"id":1073,"date":"2008-04-03T09:50:00","date_gmt":"2008-04-03T09:50:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.beliefnet.com\/beyondblue\/2008\/04\/5-ways-to-view-a-midlife-crisi.html"},"modified":"2008-04-03T09:50:00","modified_gmt":"2008-04-03T09:50:00","slug":"5-ways-to-view-a-midlife-crisi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/beyondblue\/2008\/04\/5-ways-to-view-a-midlife-crisi.html","title":{"rendered":"5 Ways to View a Midlife Crisis"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"red%20porsche3.jpg\" src=\"https:\/\/wp-media.beliefnet.com\/sites\/71\/import\/red%20porsche3.jpg\" width=\"450\" height=\"216\" \/><br \/>\nI turned 37 in February. Eric turns 39 in two months. But we already feel like we&#8217;re smack in the middle of a midlife crisis. Well, maybe that&#8217;s not the right word for it. Not a <em>crisis<\/em>\u2014just a, how do you put it\u2014vortex of time. We don&#8217;t have any time for anything.<br \/>\nAnd not even to the halfway point yet, our bodies are breaking: Eric with wrist strains for which he wears a pad\/cast to the office and knee problems\u2014me with hip pains, a pituitary tumor, an abnormal aortic valve, plus the whole mood disorder thing.<br \/>\nFurthermore, we&#8217;re getting more and more stupid with each passing day, with stress zapping our short-term memory. Example: a guy two doors down has a car detailing business. Up until yesterday, I just thought he really liked washing his car.<br \/>\n&#8220;You didn&#8217;t see that the car was different each time?&#8221; Eric asked me, shaking his head.<br \/>\n&#8220;Nope.&#8221;<br \/>\nI see it with my friends, too. Prudish friends who had valued their virginity and innocence in college are now saying things like, &#8220;I should have slept around more before I got married.&#8221; Girlfriends who have sweated their way to a corner office in respectable consulting firms have decided to drop it all to nurture their inner artist and see if they can make a living on their colorful creations.<br \/>\nSo it was with interest that I read <a href=\"http:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/wp-dyn\/content\/article\/2008\/03\/28\/AR2008032803160_pf.html\">Stefanie Weiss&#8217;s piece in the Washington Post about the midlife crisis (which you can get to by clicking here)<\/a>. Is it for real? To test her theory she interviewed five experts: two psychologists, an economist, a journalist, and a cultural anthropologist.<br \/>\nHere&#8217;s what they had to say.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Expert #1: It&#8217;s not about the nines, and it&#8217;s not about a midlife crisis, either.<\/strong><br \/>\nLaura Carstensen, a psychology professor and founding director of the Stanford Center on Longevity, flat-out rejected my theory of a series of midlife crises. In fact, she said, for most people, even one crisis in midlife would be a lot.<br \/>\n&#8220;There is no empirical evidence for a midlife crisis,&#8221; Carstensen said. &#8220;It&#8217;s just not typical that people in midlife are unhappy. Now,&#8221; she was quick to add, &#8220;that doesn&#8217;t mean that people in the middle of their lives don&#8217;t sometimes have a hard time. They do. But they aren&#8217;t more at risk for a crisis in midlife than at other times in their lives.&#8221;<br \/>\nThe real crisis, Carstensen suggested, may be at a much earlier nine: 19. &#8220;Negative emotion declines from early adulthood to pretty advanced old age. That&#8217;s been shown in dozens of studies. Twenty-year-olds show the highest levels of negative emotions, and it&#8217;s a steady linear decline to 60, when it levels off. You begin to see a slight upturn in the 70s, but it never returns to the levels you see in early adulthood.&#8221;<br \/>\nWhy? &#8220;People get better at regulating their emotions. People get better at managing life.&#8221;<br \/>\nAnd those men in their 50s who are buying tiny sports cars?<br \/>\n&#8220;It finally occurred to me,&#8221; Carstensen said. &#8220;It&#8217;s the first time in their lives they can afford the dream car.&#8221;<br \/>\n<strong>Expert #2: It is about a worldwide pattern of midlife unhappiness, but it doesn&#8217;t necessarily happen on the nines.<\/strong><br \/>\nDavid Blanchflower, an economics professor at Dartmouth, analyzed data from millions of people in dozens of countries, all the way from Albania to Zimbabwe. In this month&#8217;s issue of Social Science &amp; Medicine, he and a co-author conclude that &#8220;a typical individual&#8217;s happiness reaches its minimum &#8212; on both sides of the Atlantic and for both males and females &#8212; in middle age.&#8221;<br \/>\n&#8220;I&#8217;m not saying there is a midlife crisis,&#8221; Blanchflower told me, &#8220;but this awfully looks like it.&#8221; So much for consensus in academe.<br \/>\nWho&#8217;s right? Blanchflower is no shrinking violet when it comes to defending himself. Look at the &#8220;sheer power&#8221; of the study, he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s 72 countries. Two million people. Beat that!&#8221;<br \/>\nNot content to leave it there, he actually said, &#8220;My stick is bigger than your stick,&#8221; proving that a cigar is never just a cigar.<br \/>\n<strong>Expert #3: It&#8217;s not about anticipating birthdays. It&#8217;s about anticipating death.<\/strong><br \/>\nWall Street Journal columnist Sue Shellenbarger writes that her own midlife crisis &#8220;erupted at age 49.&#8221; Surely, she would see the value of a theory based on the nines.<br \/>\n&#8220;My age didn&#8217;t have anything to do with my crisis,&#8221; she said. &#8220;The death of my father triggered it for me.&#8221;<br \/>\nIn her book &#8220;The Breaking Point: How Female Midlife Crisis Is Transforming Today&#8217;s Women,&#8221; Shellenbarger suggests that many women wake up one day with the realization that they&#8217;ve been sitting on deep, unfulfilled desires for adventure, love, artistic expression, spirituality and success in the world. Eventually, they can&#8217;t sit still any longer.<br \/>\nShellenbarger herself started skiing down dangerous slopes and driving all-terrain vehicles way too fast. The pull to the wild side landed her in a hospital &#8212; and on a seven-year journey to &#8220;integrate&#8221; the parts of herself that had been suppressed too long.<br \/>\nIt&#8217;s not about the nines, Shellenbarger said. &#8220;It&#8217;s all about anticipation that you&#8217;re going to die without having given expression to parts of yourself that you cherish.&#8221;<br \/>\nEnter the Grim Reaper, coming too soon to a theater near you.<br \/>\n<strong>Expert #4: It&#8217;s not about death. It&#8217;s about the birth of a second life cycle.<\/strong><br \/>\nCarlo Strenger, an associate professor of psychology at Tel Aviv University and co-author of a recent Harvard Business Review article on the &#8220;existential necessity of midlife change,&#8221; said the midlife crisis today is evidence of what he calls cultural lag.<br \/>\nAlthough life expectancy at birth in the United States nears 80, he said, &#8220;we still live in a culture which seems to acknowledge only two adult ages: extended youth and old age.&#8221; Those in midlife crisis are in &#8220;a protracted panic reaction at the loss of youth.&#8221;<br \/>\nWitness the growing coffers of plastic surgeons and makers of anti-aging creams.<br \/>\nInstead of joining the desperate effort to deny aging, Strenger suggests that we knock down the myth of midlife as the onset of decline and build up the notion of a &#8220;second life cycle&#8221; full of new possibilities founded on self-knowledge and experience.<br \/>\n&#8220;Imagine &#8212; as we often have people do in psychology experiments &#8212; that you&#8217;re 20,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and you&#8217;re told you have an incurable illness. You&#8217;ll be fine for the next 30 years, then you&#8217;ll die at 50. What would you do? You&#8217;d live a full life. That&#8217;s exactly the situation 50-year-olds are in now. Statistically you have another 30 years. What are you going to do with your next decades?&#8221;<br \/>\nIt&#8217;s time, Strenger said, to move &#8220;from midlife crisis to midlife transition.&#8221;<br \/>\nBut where does that leave the nines?<br \/>\n<strong>Expert #5: It&#8217;s not about numbers. It&#8217;s about radically reshaping longer lives.<\/strong><br \/>\nNo one was buying my theory. I made one last, desperate call to Mary Catherine Bateson, a cultural anthropologist and author of &#8220;Composing a Life.&#8221; She&#8217;s a visiting scholar at the Center on Aging and Work\/Workplace Flexibility at Boston College.<br \/>\nThe erudite Bateson waxed sarcastic. &#8220;Suppose I were to say that the years of greatest development for me are going to be where the two numbers are the same: 22, 33, 44, 55, 99. Wow! You could say that just as well.&#8221;<br \/>\nShe gathered steam. &#8220;How about organizing our lives in periods of 12 years &#8212; duodecades &#8212; rather than periods of 10. At the end of your fifth duodecade, you&#8217;d be 60. Get it?&#8221;<br \/>\nUm, yeah.<br \/>\n&#8220;It&#8217;s just fashion and cliche to insist on a zero as drawing the line,&#8221; she said. I was sinking lower by the minute. Bateson switched to the high road.<br \/>\nToday there are many ways to adapt to longer lives, she said. You can tack years onto the end of life &#8212; &#8220;you would be sick for longer, decrepit for a longer period.&#8221; You can &#8220;stretch each stage of life just a little longer: more years in school, more years married before kids, and so on.&#8221; Or you can insert years into the middle of life, starting more new chapters, new relationships, new careers.<br \/>\n&#8220;If you add a room to a house,&#8221; Bateson said, &#8220;it turns out to change the function of every room in the house. You don&#8217;t leave your tennis racket in the same place, you don&#8217;t drink your coffee in the same place. The flow of the whole house changes. &#8216;Add&#8217; is the wrong word. The effect of increasing the size of the total house [adding years to life, for those who are metaphorically challenged] is to reconfigure it. It&#8217;s almost as if you were multiplying rather than adding.&#8221;<br \/>\nIn that scenario, Bateson said, &#8220;if people feel free to learn and grow and explore, maybe they don&#8217;t end up feeling trapped, and they don&#8217;t have to have a crisis at all.&#8221;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I turned 37 in February. Eric turns 39 in two months. But we already feel like we&#8217;re smack in the middle of a midlife crisis. Well, maybe that&#8217;s not the right word for it. Not a crisis\u2014just a, how do you put it\u2014vortex of time. We don&#8217;t have any time for anything. And not even&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":17,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1073","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-mental-health"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v23.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>5 Ways to View a Midlife Crisis - Beyond Blue<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/beyondblue\/2008\/04\/5-ways-to-view-a-midlife-crisi.html\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"5 Ways to View a Midlife Crisis - Beyond Blue\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"I turned 37 in February. 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