Robert Waldinger What makes a good life Lessons from the longest study on happiness TED

What keeps us healthy and happy

as we go through life?

If you were going to invest now

in your future best self,

where would you put your time
and your energy?

There was a recent survey of millennials

asking them what their
most important life goals were,

and over 80 percent said

that a major life goal for them
was to get rich.

And another 50 percent
of those same young adults

said that another major life goal

was to become famous.

(Laughter)

And we’re constantly told
to lean in to work, to push harder

and achieve more.

We’re given the impression that these
are the things that we need to go after

in order to have a good life.

Pictures of entire lives,

of the choices that people make
and how those choices work out for them,

those pictures
are almost impossible to get.

Most of what we know about human life

we know from asking people
to remember the past,

and as we know, hindsight
is anything but 20/20.

We forget vast amounts
of what happens to us in life,

and sometimes memory
is downright creative.

But what if we could watch entire lives

as they unfold through time?

What if we could study people
from the time that they were teenagers

all the way into old age

to see what really keeps people
happy and healthy?

We did that.

The Harvard Study of Adult Development

may be the longest study
of adult life that’s ever been done.

For 75 years, we’ve tracked
the lives of 724 men,

year after year, asking about their work,
their home lives, their health,

and of course asking all along the way
without knowing how their life stories

were going to turn out.

Studies like this are exceedingly rare.

Almost all projects of this kind
fall apart within a decade

because too many people
drop out of the study,

or funding for the research dries up,

or the researchers get distracted,

or they die, and nobody moves the ball
further down the field.

But through a combination of luck

and the persistence
of several generations of researchers,

this study has survived.

About 60 of our original 724 men

are still alive,

still participating in the study,

most of them in their 90s.

And we are now beginning to study

the more than 2,000 children of these men.

And I’m the fourth director of the study.

Since 1938, we’ve tracked the lives
of two groups of men.

The first group started in the study

when they were sophomores
at Harvard College.

They all finished college
during World War II,

and then most went off
to serve in the war.

And the second group that we’ve followed

was a group of boys
from Boston’s poorest neighborhoods,

boys who were chosen for the study

specifically because they were
from some of the most troubled

and disadvantaged families

in the Boston of the 1930s.

Most lived in tenements,
many without hot and cold running water.

When they entered the study,

all of these teenagers were interviewed.

They were given medical exams.

We went to their homes
and we interviewed their parents.

And then these teenagers
grew up into adults

who entered all walks of life.

They became factory workers and lawyers
and bricklayers and doctors,

one President of the United States.

Some developed alcoholism.
A few developed schizophrenia.

Some climbed the social ladder

from the bottom
all the way to the very top,

and some made that journey
in the opposite direction.

The founders of this study

would never in their wildest dreams

have imagined that I would be
standing here today, 75 years later,

telling you that
the study still continues.

Every two years, our patient
and dedicated research staff

calls up our men
and asks them if we can send them

yet one more set of questions
about their lives.

Many of the inner city Boston men ask us,

“Why do you keep wanting to study me?
My life just isn’t that interesting.”

The Harvard men never ask that question.

(Laughter)

To get the clearest picture
of these lives,

we don’t just send them questionnaires.

We interview them in their living rooms.

We get their medical records
from their doctors.

We draw their blood, we scan their brains,

we talk to their children.

We videotape them talking with their wives
about their deepest concerns.

And when, about a decade ago,
we finally asked the wives

if they would join us
as members of the study,

many of the women said,
“You know, it’s about time.”

(Laughter)

So what have we learned?

What are the lessons that come
from the tens of thousands of pages

of information that we’ve generated

on these lives?

Well, the lessons aren’t about wealth
or fame or working harder and harder.

The clearest message that we get
from this 75-year study is this:

Good relationships keep us
happier and healthier. Period.

We’ve learned three big lessons
about relationships.

The first is that social connections
are really good for us,

and that loneliness kills.

It turns out that people
who are more socially connected

to family, to friends, to community,

are happier, they’re physically healthier,
and they live longer

than people who are less well connected.

And the experience of loneliness
turns out to be toxic.

People who are more isolated
than they want to be from others

find that they are less happy,

their health declines earlier in midlife,

their brain functioning declines sooner

and they live shorter lives
than people who are not lonely.

And the sad fact
is that at any given time,

more than one in five Americans
will report that they’re lonely.

And we know that you
can be lonely in a crowd

and you can be lonely in a marriage,

so the second big lesson that we learned

is that it’s not just
the number of friends you have,

and it’s not whether or not
you’re in a committed relationship,

but it’s the quality
of your close relationships that matters.

It turns out that living in the midst
of conflict is really bad for our health.

High-conflict marriages, for example,
without much affection,

turn out to be very bad for our health,
perhaps worse than getting divorced.

And living in the midst of good,
warm relationships is protective.

Once we had followed our men
all the way into their 80s,

we wanted to look back at them at midlife

and to see if we could predict

who was going to grow
into a happy, healthy octogenarian

and who wasn’t.

And when we gathered together
everything we knew about them

at age 50,

it wasn’t their middle age
cholesterol levels

that predicted how they
were going to grow old.

It was how satisfied they were
in their relationships.

The people who were the most satisfied
in their relationships at age 50

were the healthiest at age 80.

And good, close relationships
seem to buffer us

from some of the slings and arrows
of getting old.

Our most happily partnered men and women

reported, in their 80s,

that on the days
when they had more physical pain,

their mood stayed just as happy.

But the people who were
in unhappy relationships,

on the days when they
reported more physical pain,

it was magnified by more emotional pain.

And the third big lesson that we learned
about relationships and our health

is that good relationships
don’t just protect our bodies,

they protect our brains.

It turns out that being
in a securely attached relationship

to another person in your 80s
is protective,

that the people who are in relationships

where they really feel they can count
on the other person in times of need,

those people’s memories
stay sharper longer.

And the people in relationships

where they feel they really
can’t count on the other one,

those are the people who experience
earlier memory decline.

And those good relationships,
they don’t have to be smooth all the time.

Some of our octogenarian couples
could bicker with each other

day in and day out,

but as long as they felt that they
could really count on the other

when the going got tough,

those arguments didn’t take a toll
on their memories.

So this message,

that good, close relationships
are good for our health and well-being,

this is wisdom that’s as old as the hills.

Why is this so hard to get
and so easy to ignore?

Well, we’re human.

What we’d really like is a quick fix,

something we can get

that’ll make our lives good
and keep them that way.

Relationships are messy
and they’re complicated

and the hard work of tending
to family and friends,

it’s not sexy or glamorous.

It’s also lifelong. It never ends.

The people in our 75-year study
who were the happiest in retirement

were the people who had actively worked
to replace workmates with new playmates.

Just like the millennials
in that recent survey,

many of our men when they
were starting out as young adults

really believed that fame and wealth
and high achievement

were what they needed to go after
to have a good life.

But over and over, over these 75 years,
our study has shown

that the people who fared the best were
the people who leaned in to relationships,

with family, with friends, with community.

So what about you?

Let’s say you’re 25,
or you’re 40, or you’re 60.

What might leaning in
to relationships even look like?

Well, the possibilities
are practically endless.

It might be something as simple
as replacing screen time with people time

or livening up a stale relationship
by doing something new together,

long walks or date nights,

or reaching out to that family member
who you haven’t spoken to in years,

because those all-too-common family feuds

take a terrible toll

on the people who hold the grudges.

I’d like to close with a quote
from Mark Twain.

More than a century ago,

he was looking back on his life,

and he wrote this:

“There isn’t time, so brief is life,

for bickerings, apologies,
heartburnings, callings to account.

There is only time for loving,

and but an instant,
so to speak, for that.”

The good life is built
with good relationships.

Thank you.

(Applause)

是什么让

我们在生活中保持健康和快乐?

如果你现在要投资

于未来最好的自己,

你会把时间
和精力放在哪里?

最近对千禧一代进行了一项调查,

询问他们
最重要的人生目标是什么

,超过 80% 的人表示

,他们的主要人生目标
是致富。

另外 50%
的年轻人

表示,另一个主要的人生目标

是成名。

(笑声

) 我们经常被告知
要努力工作,更加努力

并取得更多成就。

我们给人的印象是

,为了过上美好的生活,我们需要追求这些东西。

整个生活的照片

,人们做出的选择
以及这些选择如何为他们带来好处,

这些
照片几乎是不可能得到的。

我们对人类生活的大部分

了解都是通过要求
人们记住过去

而知道的,而且正如我们所知,事后
诸葛亮绝非 20/20。

我们忘记
了生活中发生的大量事情

,有时记忆
是完全有创意的。

但是,如果我们可以观察整个生命

随着时间的推移而展开呢?

如果我们可以研究
从青少年

一直到老年

的人们,看看真正让人们
快乐和健康的东西会怎样?

我们做到了。

哈佛成人发展研究

可能
是有史以来最长的成人生活研究。

75 年来,我们年复一年地追踪
了 724 名男性的生活

,询问他们的工作
、家庭生活、健康状况

,当然还有一路询问,
却不知道他们的生活

故事将如何发展。

像这样的研究极为罕见。

几乎所有此类项目
在十年内都失败了,

因为太多人
退出研究,

或者研究资金枯竭,

或者研究人员分心,

或者他们死了,没有人把球推到
更远的地方。

但通过运气


几代研究人员的坚持,

这项研究得以幸存。

在我们最初的 724 名男性中,约有 60 人

还活着,

仍在参与这项研究,

其中大部分是 90 多岁。

我们现在开始研究

这些人的 2000 多个孩子。

我是这项研究的第四任主任。

自 1938 年以来,我们追踪
了两组男性的生活。

第一组在哈佛大学

二年级时就开始了这项
研究。

他们都在二战期间完成了大学学业

然后大部分人都
去参战了。

我们跟踪的第二组是

来自波士顿最贫困社区的一群

男孩,他们之所以被选中参加这项研究,

是因为他们
来自 1930 年代波士顿一些最困难

和最弱势的家庭

大多数人住在公寓里,
许多人没有冷热水。

当他们进入研究时,

所有这些青少年都接受了采访。

他们接受了体检。

我们去了他们家
,采访了他们的父母。

然后这些少年
长大成人

,进入各行各业。

他们成为工厂工人、律师
、瓦工和医生,

成为美国的一位总统。

一些人发展成酗酒。
少数发展为精神分裂症。

有些人从社会底层

一直爬到最高层

,有些人
则朝着相反的方向走。

这项研究

的创始人做梦

都想不到我会在
75 年后的今天站在这里,

告诉你
这项研究仍在继续。

每两年,我们耐心
和敬业的研究人员都会

打电话给我们的人
,询问他们是否可以再向他们发送

一组
关于他们生活的问题。

许多波士顿市中心的男人问我们,

“你为什么一直想研究我?
我的生活没有那么有趣。”

哈佛人从不问这个问题。

(笑声)

为了更清楚地
了解这些生活,

我们不只是给他们发问卷。

我们在他们的客厅采访他们。

我们从他们的医生那里得到他们的医疗记录

我们抽他们的血,我们扫描他们的大脑,

我们和他们的孩子交谈。

我们录制了他们与妻子
谈论他们最深切的担忧的视频。

大约十年前,当
我们最终询问妻子们

是否愿意
作为研究成员加入我们时,

许多女性说:
“你知道,现在是时候了。”

(笑声)

那么我们学到了什么?

我们
从这些生活中生成的数万页信息中吸取了哪些教训

嗯,这些课程不是关于财富
或名望,也不是关于越来越努力的工作。

我们
从这项 75 年的研究中得到的最明确的信息是:

良好的人际关系让我们
更快乐、更健康。 时期。

我们已经学到了
关于人际关系的三大教训。

首先是社交关系
对我们真的有好处,

而孤独会杀死人。

事实证明,

与家人、朋友、社区

有更多社交联系的人比那些联系较少的人更快乐,身体更健康
,寿命更长

孤独的经历被
证明是有毒的。 与不孤单的人相比,

与其他人相比更孤立的人

发现他们不那么快乐,

他们的健康在中年早期下降,

他们的大脑功能下降得更快

,他们的寿命
比不孤独的人短。

可悲的事实
是,在任何特定时间,

超过五分之一的美国人
会报告说他们很孤独。

我们知道你
可以在人群

中孤独,也可以在婚姻中孤独,

所以我们学到的第二个重要教训

是,这
不仅仅是你有多少朋友,

也不是
你是否在 一段忠诚的关系,

但重要的
是你的亲密关系的质量。

事实证明,生活在
冲突中确实对我们的健康有害。

例如,
没有太多感情

的高冲突婚姻对我们的健康非常不利,
也许比离婚更糟糕。

生活在良好、
温暖的关系中是保护性的。

一旦我们一直跟踪我们的
男人到 80 多岁,

我们想回顾他们在中年时的情况

,看看我们是否可以预测

谁会成长
为快乐、健康的八十多

岁,谁不是。

当我们将
我们在 50 岁时所知道的关于他们的所有信息汇总在一起时

,预测
他们将如何变老的并不是他们的中年胆固醇水平。

这是
他们对关系的满意程度。 50 岁时

对他们的关系最满意的人

在 80 岁时是最健康的。

良好、亲密的关系
似乎可以让我们

免受一些
变老的影响。

我们最幸福的伴侣

报告说,在他们 80

多岁时,在他们遭受更多身体疼痛的日子里,

他们的情绪保持同样快乐。

但是那些
处于不愉快关系中的人,

在他们
报告更多身体痛苦的日子里

,更多的情感痛苦会放大它。

我们学到的关于人际关系和健康的第三个重要教训

是,良好的
人际关系不仅可以保护我们的身体,

还可以保护我们的大脑。

事实证明,

在 80 多岁时与另一个人保持安全的依恋关系
是保护性的,

那些

真正觉得
在需要时可以依靠他人的关系中的人,

这些人的记忆力会
保持更长时间。

而那些在恋爱

中他们觉得他们真的
不能指望另一个

人的人,就是那些经历
过较早记忆衰退的人。

而那些好的关系
,也不一定要一直一帆风顺。

我们的一些八十多岁的夫妇
可能会日复一日地互相争吵

但只要他们觉得在困难时期
他们真的可以依靠对方

这些争吵就不会影响
他们的记忆。

所以这个信息

,良好、亲密的关系
对我们的健康和幸福有好处,

这是与山一样古老的智慧。

为什么这很难得到却又
那么容易被忽视?

嗯,我们是人。

我们真正想要的是快速修复,

我们可以获得的

东西会让我们的生活变得美好
并保持这种状态。

人际关系很混乱
,很复杂

,照顾家人和朋友的辛勤工作

,既不性感也不迷人。

也是终身的。 永无止境。

在我们 75 年的研究
中,退休后最快乐

的人是那些积极努力
用新的玩伴代替同事的人。

就像
最近那次调查中的千禧一代一样

,我们的许多男性在刚
成年时

真的相信名利
和高成就

是他们
过上美好生活所需要的。

但是,在这 75 年中,我们的研究一遍又一遍地

表明,表现最好
的人是那些倾向于

与家人、朋友和社区建立关系的人。

那你呢?

假设你是 25 岁,
或者你是 40 岁,或者你是 60 岁。

你可能会倾向于
建立什么样的关系?

好吧,
可能性几乎是无穷无尽的。

这可能很简单,
比如用人们的时间代替屏幕时间,

或者
通过一起做一些新的事情、

长途散步或约会之

夜来维持陈旧的关系,或者联系
你多年未联系的家庭成员,

因为那些 太常见的家庭不和对

怀恨在心的人造成了可怕的伤害

我想以马克吐温的一句话作为结尾

一个多世纪前,

他回顾自己的人生,

写道:

“没有时间,生命如此短暂

,争吵、道歉、
心痛、追责。

只有爱的时间,

和 但
可以说是一瞬间。”

美好的生活是建立
在良好的人际关系之上的。

谢谢你。

(掌声)