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Are You an Optimist? Could You Learn to Be? Your Health May Depend on It.

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By Judith Graham

Tuesday, December 13, 2022 (Kaiser News) — When you think about the future, do you expect good or bad things to happen?

If you weigh in on the тАЬgoodтАЭ side, youтАЩre an optimist. And that has positive implications for your health in later life.

Multiple studies show a strong association between higher levels of optimism and a reduced risk of conditions such as heart disease, stroke, and cognitive impairment. Several studies have also linked optimism with greater longevity.

One of the latest, published this year, comes from researchers at HarvardтАЩs T.H. Chan School of Public Health in collaboration with colleagues at other universities. It found that older women who scored highest on measures of optimism lived 4.4 years longer, on average, than those with the lowest scores. Results held true across races and ethnicities.

Why would optimism make such a difference?

Experts advance various explanations: People who are optimistic cope better with the challenges of daily life and are less likely to experience stress than people with less positive attitudes. TheyтАЩre more likely to eat well and exercise, and they often have stronger networks of family and friends who can provide assistance.

Also, people who are optimistic tend to engage more effectively in problem-solving strategies and to be better at regulating their emotions.

Of course, a feedback loop is at play here: People may be more likely to experience optimism if they enjoy good health and a good quality of life. But optimism isnтАЩt confined to those who are doing well. Studies suggest that it is a genetically heritable trait and that it can be cultivated through concerted interventions.

What does optimism look like in practice? For answers, I talked to several older adults who identify as optimists but who donтАЩt take this characteristic for granted. Instead, itтАЩs a choice they make every day.

Patricia Reeves, 73, Oklahoma City. тАЬIтАЩve had a fairly good life, but IтАЩve had my share of traumas, like everyone,тАЭ said Reeves, a widow of seven years who lives alone. тАЬI think itтАЩs my faith and my optimism thatтАЩs pulled me through.тАЭ

A longtime teacher and school principal, Reeves retired to care for her parents and her second husband, a Baptist minister, before they died. During the covid-19 pandemic, she said, тАЬIтАЩve been developing my spirituality.тАЭ

When I asked what optimism meant to her, Reeves said: тАЬYou can see the good in each situation, or you can see the negative. When something isnтАЩt going the way I wish, I prefer to ask myself, тАШWhat am I learning from this? What part did I play in this, and am I repeating patterns of behavior? How can I change?тАЩтАЭ

As for the challenges that come with aging тАФ the loss of friends and family, health issues тАФ Reeves spoke of optimism as a тАЬcan-doтАЭ attitude that keeps her going. тАЬYou donтАЩt spend your time concentrating on your health or thinking about your aches and pains. You take them in as a fact, and then you let them go,тАЭ she said. тАЬOr if youтАЩve got a problem you can solve, you figure out how to solve it, and you move on to tomorrow.тАЭ

тАЬThereтАЩs always something to be grateful for, and you focus on that.тАЭ

Grace Harvey, 100, LaGrange, Georgia. тАЬI look for the best to happen under any circumstances,тАЭ said Harvey, a retired teacher and a devoted Baptist. тАЬYou can work through any situation with the help of God.тАЭ

Her parents, a farmer and a teacher in Georgia, barely earned enough to get by. тАЬEven though you would classify us as poor, I didnтАЩt think of myself as poor,тАЭ she said. тАЬI just thought of myself as blessed to have parents doing the best they could.тАЭ

Today, Harvey lives in a mobile home and teaches Sunday school. She never married or had children, but she was surrounded by loving family members and former students at her 100th birthday party in October.

тАЬNot having my own family, I was able to touch the lives of many others,тАЭ she said. тАЬI feel grateful for God letting me live this long: I still want to be around to help somebody.тАЭ

Ron Fegley, 82, Placer County, California. тАЬIтАЩm positive about the future because I think in the long run things keep getting better,тАЭ said Fegley, a retired physicist who lives in the Sierra Nevada foothills with his wife.

тАЬScience is a very important part of my life, and science is always on the upwards path,тАЭ he continued. тАЬPeople may have the wrong ideas for a while, but eventually new experiments and data come along and correct things.тАЭ

Fegley tends a small orchard where he grows peaches, cherries, and pears. тАЬWe donтАЩt know whatтАЩs going to happen; no one does,тАЭ he told me. тАЬBut we enjoy our life currently, and weтАЩre just going to go on enjoying it as much as we can.тАЭ

Anita Lerek, over 65, Toronto. тАЬI was a very troubled younger person,тАЭ said Lerek, who declined to give her exact age. тАЬSome of that had to do with the fact my parents were Holocaust survivors and joy was not a major part of their menu. They struggled a lot, and I was full of resentment.тАЭ

When I asked her about optimism, Lerek described exploring Buddhism and learning to take responsibility for her thoughts and actions. тАЬMine is a cultivated optimism,тАЭ she told me. тАЬI go to my books тАФ Buddhist teachings, the Talmud тАФ theyтАЩve taught me a lot. You face all your demons, and you cultivate a garden of wisdom and projects and emotional connections.тАЭ

At this point in life, тАЬIтАЩm grateful for every moment, every experience, because I know it could end any moment,тАЭ said Lerek, a lawyer and entrepreneur who writes poetry and still works part time. тАЬIt boils down to, тАШIs the glass half-empty or half-full?тАЩ I choose the fullness.тАЭ

Katharine Esty, 88, Concord, Massachusetts. When Esty fell into a funk after turning 80, she looked for a guide to what to expect in the decade ahead. One didnтАЩt exist, so she wrote тАЬEightysomethings: A Practical Guide to Letting Go, Aging Well, and Finding Unexpected Happiness.тАЭ

For the project, Esty, a social psychologist and psychotherapist, interviewed 128 people in their 80s. тАЬThe more people I talked with, the happier I became,тАЭ she told me. тАЬPeople were doing interesting things, leading interesting lives, even though they were coping with a lot of losses.

тАЬNot only was I learning stuff, having this purpose and focus brought me a tremendous amount of joy. My vision of what was possible in old age was greatly expanded.тАЭ

Part of what Esty learned is the importance of тАЬletting go of our inner vision of what our life should be and being open to whatтАЩs really happening.тАЭ

For example, after stomach surgery last year, Esty needed physical therapy and had to use a walker. тАЬI had always prided myself on being a very active person, and I had to accept my vulnerability,тАЭ she said. Similarly, although her 87-year-old boyfriend thought heтАЩd spend his retirement fishing in Maine, he canтАЩt walk well now, and thatтАЩs not possible.

тАЬI have come to think that you choose your attitude, and optimism is an attitude,тАЭ said Esty, who lives in a retirement community. тАЬNow that IтАЩm 88, my task is to live in the present and believe that things will be better, maybe not in my lifetime but decades from now. Life will prevail, the world will go on тАФ itтАЩs a sort of trust, I think.

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