middle adulthood: emotional and social development
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Chapter 16. MIDDLE ADULTHOOD: Emotional and social development. Theories of Self in Transition. Maturity and Self-Concept Maturity: capacity to undergo continual change in order to adapt successfully and cope flexibly with the demands and responsibilities of life. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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MIDDLE ADULTHOOD: Emotional and social development
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Theories of Self in TransitionTheories of Self in Transition
Maturity and Self-Concept– Maturity: capacity to undergo continual change
in order to adapt successfully and cope flexibly with the demands and responsibilities of life.
Self-Concept: The view we have of ourselves through time as “the real me.”
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Stage ModelsStage Models
Generativity versus stagnation (Erikson) The concern in establishing and guiding the
next generation.
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PeckPeck
Robert Peck’s 4 tasks at midlife:– Valuing wisdom versus valuing physical
powers– Socializing vs. sexualizing– Cathectic flexibility v cathectic impoverishment– Mental flexibility v mental rigidity
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Trait ModelsTrait Models
Behavioral traits that constitute the core of personality: extraversion, neuroticism, openness, agreeableness and conscientiousness.
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Behavior as the outcome of the characteristics of the situation in which the person is momentarily located.
Situational ModelsSituational Models
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Behavior is always a joint product of the person and the situation.
Interactionist ModelsInteractionist Models
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Gender and Personality at Gender and Personality at MidlifeMidlife
Levinson’s Theory of Male Midlife Development– Midlife transition (40-45)
– Entry life structure for middle adulthood (45-50)
– Age 50 transition(50-55)
– Culminating life structure for middle adulthood (55-60)
– Late adult transition (60-65)
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Levinson’s Theory of Women’s Levinson’s Theory of Women’s Midlife DevelopmentMidlife Development
Primarily Homemakers– Women center lives in domestic sphere
Traditional Marriage– The women are homemakers and the men are
provisioners Single Successful Career Woman:
– Afraid of “single” stigma
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WomenWomen
Midlife Transition Career Woman Compromise of work and family
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WomenWomen
Ravenna Helson and the Mills Longitudinal Study Subjects at Midlife– Women: Turmoil in 40s, stability by 52– Men: greatest productivity after 50– Homemaker women: adjustments with empty
nest.– Blue collar workers both genders: time of
decline
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WomenWomen
Continuity and Discontinuity in Gender Characteristics
Men and women move in opposite directions across the life span with respect to assertive and aggressiveness.
Unisex pattern emerges in later life.
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Personality Continuity and Discontinuity Sandwich generation: responsibilities for
aging parents and minor children; bridge across generations.
PersonalityPersonality
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The Social MilieuThe Social Milieu
Familial Relations Married Couples (Lauer and Lauer) Successful couples:
– Positive attitude toward one’s spouse– Marriage is a long-term commitment and a
sacred institution.
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Extramarital Sexual RelationsExtramarital Sexual Relations
Sex not the lure for EMS. Loneliness, emotional excitement, and
wanting to prove “still young.”
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Separation and DivorceSeparation and Divorce
College-educated wives: less risk Married young : higher risk Longer a marriage survives: less risk Larger family, own home: less risk Wife’s economic independence: higher risk Empty nest transition: impacts marital
stability
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Life as a SingleLife as a Single
Displaced Homemaker: a woman whose primary activity has been homemaking and who has lost her main source of income because of divorce from or death of husband.
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6 of every 10 divorced men remarry. 3 of every 4 divorced women remarry. Men more likely to remarry: larger pool
RemarriageRemarriage
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StepfamiliesStepfamilies
60% of remarrieds are parents. More than one-third of children will live in
stepfamily before they are 18. The more complex the social system the
greater opportunity for conflict. Opportunity for positive adaptation.
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Empty nest: period of life when children have grown up and leave home.
Empty-nest syndrome: a parent who has found her or his meaning in life primarily in the children often experiences a profound sense of loss when children are gone.
Adjustment is gradual.
Adult Children and Adult Children and GrandchildrenGrandchildren
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Daughters and daughters-in-law face most pressures.
Best scenario: financially independent generations with separate residences.
Caring for Elderly ParentsCaring for Elderly Parents
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FriendshipsFriendships
Friendships play a vital part in happiness and health.
Women in midlife have more friends. Men have more acquaintances. Women maintain family contacts, and
friendships take up where marriages leave off.
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The WorkplaceThe Workplace
Job Satisfaction Alienation: a pervasive sense of
powerlessnes, meaninglessness, normlessness, isolation and self-estrangement.
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The inability to gain a sense of self-actualization in their work.
Older people more satisfied with jobs than younger people.
Job BurnoutJob Burnout
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Midlife Career ChangeMidlife Career Change
Half of Americans polled had switched jobs at least once and 43% said a future switch was likely.
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Unemployment has adverse effects on physical and mental health
Stages of behavioral and emotional reactions to unemployment:– Shock, relief, relaxation– Concerted effort to find new job– Self-esteem begins to crumble– Resignation and withdrawal; conscious decision to
change careers
Unemployment and Forced Unemployment and Forced Early RetirementEarly Retirement
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Dual-Earner CouplesDual-Earner Couples
61% of married couples are dual earners.