pull down to refresh

The U-shaped curve that pegged youth and old age as the happiest times of life has changed
Is the midlife crisis a common rite of passage—or just a mythical concept that makes for grabby headlines? Research measuring well-being has typically provided solid evidence for such a period of soul searching. Over the course of a lifetime, happiness tends to start out high early in adulthood and decline in middle age, only to rise later in life. Unhappiness follows a mirror pattern—with the youngest and oldest tending to be the least unhappy and those in middle age being the most unhappy.
...
I think they have always told us that happiness has to be sought and not that it has to be built, we always say I will be happy when I graduate, when I get married, when something happens and we forget that being happy is something you have to do every day.
reply
It's because young people are all zonked out on social media, which is proven to lead to bad mental health outcomes
reply