Publication | Open Access
Time since birth and time left to live: opposing forces in constructing psychological wellbeing
56
Citations
62
References
2013
Year
Quality Of LifeYoung Adult DevelopmentPersonal DevelopmentAgingWell-being (Indigenous Health)Health PsychologyPsychological WellbeingHappinessOpposing ForcesPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyMidlife HealthHuman WellbeingLifespan DevelopmentPsychological Well-beingHealth SciencesChild Well-beingBehavioral SciencesEmotional PsychologyEmotional Well-beingAbstract AgeingLived TimeGlobal AgingApplied Social PsychologyAdult DevelopmentLifespan AgingPositive PsychologyElderly WellbeingLife SatisfactionSubjective Well-beingChronological AgeDevelopmental ScienceLater Adulthood
ABSTRACT Ageing, by definition, involves moving across lived time. Grounded in developmental psychology, particularly lifespan developmental theory, this study examines two time-related factors that may affect psychological wellbeing in adulthood. Particularly, chronological age and perceived time left to live ( i.e. future time perspective) are predicted to act as opposing forces in the construction of psychological wellbeing. Young (N = 285, 19–29 years) and middle-aged adults (N = 135, 47–64 years) self-reported their current psychological wellbeing (across six dimensions) and their sense of future time perspective. As predicted, mediation analyses show that higher levels of chronological age (being in midlife), and having a more open-ended, positive future time perspective are both related to higher psychological wellbeing. Note, however, that being in midlife is related to a more limited and negative future time perspective. As such, confirming our conceptual argument, while both age and future perspective are measures of time in a general sense, analyses show that they act as unique, opposing forces in the construction of psychological wellbeing. The current research suggests that individuals can optimise psychological wellbeing to the extent that they maintain an open-ended and positive sense of the future.
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