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Me Generation' Baby
Boomers find fulfillment through
Volunteerism, Family Ties
Baby boomers may be popularly portrayed as whiners,
complainers and narcissists, but a new study
by University of Massachusetts Amherst
psychology Professor Susan Krauss Whitbourne
says the 50-somethings are getting a bad
rap.
"It's wrong to say baby boomers are selfish
and only care about staying young," says
Susan Krauss Whitbourne.
"They have a
feeling of connection to younger generations
and a social conscience."
Whitbourne's findings, based on three
decades of data from two groups of baby
boomers, were published in the September
issue of the journal Developmental
Psychology, published by the American
Psychological Association.
The study began in 1966 at the University of
Rochester in New York, when a group of
students participated in a research project
on personality development.
Similar studies of successive generations of students at
Rochester as well as follow-up surveys with
participants in the earliest groups have
yielded 34 years of information about the
life changes experienced by leading edge
boomers, who were in their mid- to late 50s,
and trailing edge boomers, who were in their
mid-40s, at the time of the most recent
survey.
"What's most interesting is seeing what
happened to baby boomers in midlife," says
Whitbourne. "Some became more fulfilled,
others became despairing, and yet others
remained relatively stable.
"My research design allowed me to suggest which changes in
their lives were most closely connected with
a growth in fulfillment."
According to Whitbourne, the results suggest
that personality growth doesn't follow a
ladder model where one stage succeeds
another, but more closely resembles a
matrix, in which issues associated with
early stages of life are continuously
revisited through life.
For Whitbourne, the study illustrates that
we are not locked into a narrowly defined
life by the time we are of college age.
"I've seen people overcome social deficits over the course
of the study," she says. "This really shows
that you don't have to give up on yourself.
People can change through their entire
life."
Since the last study, the boomers have found
fulfillment beyond the workplace, says
Whitbourne.
In the 1980s, the "me generation" was working hard and
making a lot of money, but something was
missing from their lives. At the time,
Whitbourne said the results were shaped by
Reagan-era social values.
By the '90s, however, the volunteerism of
the Clinton years seems to have taken root
among those unfulfilled boomers, she says.
"There is a real concern about social
well-being that goes back to the core values
they developed in college."
Another change Whitbourne notes concerns
"industry," a personality trait associated
with the work ethic.
The oldest boomers in the study had measured far lower on
industry than other age groups in earlier
surveys, but the latest data show they've
caught up with their peers.
"It would appear from the present analyses
that the very lowest industry scores were
obtained in college from participants who,
in early adulthood, had jobs with extremely
low prestige," says the study.
"However, they managed to exceed their peers in industry
scores throughout the course of the study."
For midlife women, the results also support
other studies that found gains in
self-confidence and determination through
the workplace, says Whitbourne.
"It is possible that for these leading-edge baby boomer
women, feelings of competence were
suppressed in college, when it seemed as
though their careers would play an important
role in their future success," she writes.
The study also reinforces the idea that
individuals can overcome early issues with
intimacy and relationships, notes Whitbourne,
and "catch up" with their psychologically
more fortunate peers.
According to the data, participants who were not in a
committed relationship early in adulthood
showed continued gains throughout the period
of the study and moved toward an
increasingly favorable resolution that
exceeded those peers who were in a committed
relationship in early adulthood.
"Enhanced development gains" were also noted
for boomers who became parents after the age
of 31. By waiting until their careers were
established, those study participants may
have been "best able to enjoy their new
parenthood status to the fullest," says
Whitbourne.
Whitbourne says the study also lays to rest
the myth of the midlife crisis. Based on the
interviews and surveys, she says, "My study
confirms others in the empirical literature
that despite its popularity in the pop
culture, the majority of adults don't freak
out in their 40s or 50s."
That's not to say the study participants
haven't had their ups and downs, says
Whitbourne, but individuals grapple with
their problems in a variety of ways.
"People may experience depression in midlife, but it's too
glib to write that off as a midlife crisis.
Other factors must be considered."
The study is co-authored by Joel R. Sneed of
Queens College, City University of New York,
Columbia University and the New York State
Psychiatric Institute, and Aline Sayer,
visiting associate professor of psychology
at UMass Amherst.
Source
University of Massachusetts Amherst
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