Speaking of Psychology - Living the better single life (SOP46)
Episode Date: March 31, 2017Married people are often considered to be happier and healthier, while single people are often stereotyped as being isolated, self-centered and unhappy. But what if these are myths? In this episode, p...sychologist Bella DePaulo, PhD, talks about the benefits of remaining unattached and calls on psychology to pay more attention to why certain single people do, in fact, thrive. APA is currently seeking proposals for APA 2020, click here to learn more https://convention.apa.org/proposals Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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For generations, living happily ever after usually meant getting married.
If you found your perfect match and tied the knot, you would be happier, healthier, and less lonely.
Meanwhile, single people are often stereotyped as being isolated, self-centered, and unhappy.
In this episode, we speak with one psychologist who has dug deep into the research on singles and married couples
and finds that everything you think you know about single people is probably wrong.
I'm Audrey Hamilton, and this is Speaking of Psychology.
Bella DiPaolo is a project scientist at the University of California, Santa Barbara,
and has been described by Atlantic Magazine as America's foremost thinker and writer on the single experience.
She has written more than 100 academic publications, including many on the topic of single life,
and is the author of the book Singled Out, How Singles Are Stereotyped, Stigmatized, and Ignored, and Still Live Happily Ever After.
Her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Mental Health.
Welcome, Dr. DePaulo.
Thank you so much for having me.
There has been a lot of research and media coverage focusing lately on happiness.
You know, one of the big questions seems to be, well, getting married make you happier.
We all know, you know, there are unhappy marriages out there, of course.
But yet our culture obviously seems to favor marriage over being single.
What does the research show us?
Do you have to be married to be happy?
You are so right about the culture favoring marriage,
and you would think with all this celebration of marriage and coupling and weddings,
that married people would be happier.
But it turns out that if you follow the same people over the course of their lives
and ask them over and over again,
are you happy, are you happy, are you happy, how happy are you?
It turns out that when people get married, they end up no happier than they.
they were when they were single. So if they were a really happy single person, they'll probably
be a happy married person. If they were not so happy as a single person, they probably will be
not so happy as a married person. The only little hint you get that getting married makes
you happier is when you first get married, you know, right around the time of the wedding, it's all
very exciting. You're a newlywed, right? Yeah, exactly. So sometimes people get a little bump in
happiness then, but then they go back to being as happy or as unhappy as they were when they
were single. And here's something else about that newlywed affect that little increase in
happiness around the wedding. It only happens for the married people who get married and stay
married. If you're one of those married couples who's going to end up divorced, but as your
wedding is approaching, you're already getting a tiny bit less happy. Interesting. Yes. So you're
single. Your biography on your website says, I'm single, always have been, always will be.
Exactly. What made you want to focus on studying the lives of single people?
You know, how much of your research is about understanding yourself?
Well, yeah, I have always been single. And I was never insecure about my own desire to live single.
It just felt right to me. Was I really that different in wanting to stay single and feeling
like I got a lot out of my single life. And so a lot of my research was motivated by that. In fact,
at the very beginning, before I had ever done a single study, I just started approaching
other single people at social events. And I'd go up to them and I'd say something like,
do you ever feel like you treat it differently because you're single?
And the first person I approached had all these stories,
and then somebody else joined us, and he had stories,
and then somebody else joined us, and we talked all night.
There was something about the lives of single people
that was really important to them
and was not being addressed in the culture at large,
in the popular media,
and as I would later learn, really not so much by social scientists either.
One of the things I did in the last couple of months was to look at psych info,
which is the database of all the articles, books, dissertations, etc.,
that had ever been published relevant to psychology.
And I looked for articles on marriage and married people,
and I looked for articles on people who had always been single.
And I found that just since the year 2000, there have been more than 19,000 articles about marriage and married people.
And only 501 about single people.
And most of those articles about lifelong single people were just articles in which they were the comparison group in studies where marriage researchers were trying to say,
oh, if you get married, you'll be happy or healthier,
which, of course, turns out not to be true.
So I thought that was really interesting, too.
And it shows that even now, nearly two decades
after I first started studying single life,
we still are the neglected population
among social science researchers.
Research is still overwhelmingly
about marriage and married people.
people. And that is so inappropriate at a time when the number of people who are not married
in the United States, if you start counting at 16, so 16 and older, the number of people who are
not married is greater than the number of people who are married. Yeah. The single population is growing.
Yes, and it has been for decades. What are some of the key differences in what single people
value versus married couples. I'm particularly interested among those who consciously choose to remain
single. Right. Right. I like to, I've been trying to study people who I call single at heart.
Those are people who live their best, most authentic, most meaningful lives by living single.
So when you ask people who are single at heart, what they think when they know they're going to have some time alone,
coming up. Overwhelmingly, more than 95% say they look forward to it, they really savor
their solitude, and they don't worry, or they very rarely worry that if they have time to
themselves, they're going to feel lonely. And yet, social science researchers have been just
totally preoccupied with studies of loneliness. Now, loneliness is a really important thing
to study. And yet, we also need to be more aware of what people can get out of solitude rather than
just worrying about people who are going to be lonely. So that's one of the ways that single people
differ from married. They really love their solitude. Another thing is that they really want their work
to be meaningful. So there was the study that followed people starting when they were high school,
years until they were 27 years old. And when they were 27 years old, the people who had been
single the whole time said that they wanted jobs that were meaningful. And the married people
were more likely to say they wanted jobs with good pay and good chance to get a raise. Now,
you might think, well, the married people just said that because they're married. But if you look
back to when they were all in high school and no one was married, then they're married, then they
The people who would eventually stay single were already saying that they wanted work that was intrinsically rewarding.
And the people who would eventually get married were already saying, I want work that pays well and there's lots of chances to advance.
Right.
We talked a little bit about the growing number of single people, and I want to go back to that.
So is this simply because people are delaying marriage or people just foregoing it all together?
I'm just curious what this says about our society moving forward.
Right.
So there is a big difference in when people get married now compared to in the past.
So, for example, in 1956, men got married on the average around age 22,
about half got married before 22, half got married after.
women it was 20.
Now those ages are 29 and 27.
So half of all men who will eventually get married
are not yet married at age 29.
And half of all women who will eventually get married
are not yet married at age 27.
So that's a huge difference in how we spend our early adult lives.
And also, more people are simply stuble.
staying single. And when you think about the reasons for it, there is people sometimes want to
finish their education first, or they want to get a good job first, and that could be difficult
with growing inequality in economics and globalization. It just can be harder for people to find
the economic security that they sometimes want to have before they first get married. So there
are lots of reasons like that. But the reason that I focus on because it gets so little attention
is that for some, maybe many single people, they are single because they want to be,
because they're embracing single life, because living single is the way they live their
best, most fulfilling, most meaningful life. Another way that
that single and married people differ in their values and what they care about is that, you know,
married people tend to focus on the one, their spouse, and so their life can be centered around
this one person. Well, people who are single, maybe especially people who embrace single life,
like to create a life around the ones instead of the one.
So there is research showing that it's single people
who are more connected to friends, to siblings,
to their parents, to neighbors, their colleagues.
And it's just the opposite of our stereotypes,
which say, oh, single people are the loners, who are social isolates.
And in fact, it's single people who are knitting society together.
and these kinds of studies that follow people from when they're single to when they get married
find that when people get married, they become more insular, even if they don't have kids.
They tend to focus more on each other, and the time they used to spend with their friends
or the attention they used to pay to their parents or their siblings, that sort of diminishes.
whereas single people are still connected to other people in those kinds of ways.
So that's another way that single and merry people differ.
Another is in the meaningful contributions they make.
So single people do a lot of volunteering.
Single people also are very much there for people who need help.
So for aging parents in particular,
if your parents are getting older,
and they're needing help, they are much more likely to get it
from their grown kids who are single
than from their grown kids who are married.
And the same thing is true for other people,
whether your parents or someone you're related to
or someone you're totally not related to at all.
If there's someone you know and care about
who has the kind of illness or disability
that requires help for a long period of time,
three months or more, again, it's single people who step in to provide that help more than
married people do. And I think that's really interesting because of the stereotypes of single
people as leading lives of unfettered pleasure seeing. But in fact, they tend to do a lot of meaningful
work. And one last thing I wanted to say about the differences in single and married people
is single people experience more personal growth.
So there was this one study that followed single people,
more than 1,000 people who had always been single,
and followed them over a five-year period,
and also followed more than 3,000 people
who had been married during that entire five years.
And they asked them questions about personal growth
and the single people were more likely to agree with statements such as,
for me, life has been a continuous process of learning, change, and growth.
And statements such as, I think it's important to have new experiences
that challenge how you think about yourself and the world.
Whereas the people who stayed married over that five-year period
were more likely to agree with statements such as
I gave up trying to make improvements in my life a long time ago.
It sounds like single people and married people could actually learn from each other
when it comes to leading a richer life or a better life being in happiness.
What kind of advice or words of encouragement for single and married people would you give out there?
Who might be listening?
Let me start with single people.
Sure.
Because single people are so often pressured,
to think that there's something wrong with them,
whether they should be trying to get married
or trying to find someone.
What I like to say to single people is
live your single life fully, joyfully, and unapologetically.
And even if you're a single person
who wishes you weren't single,
I say the same thing.
Those years that you have single,
embrace them, live them fully.
do the things you've always wanted to do.
Don't think about single life the old-fashioned way,
which is single years of the years when you just mark time
until you find the one. Don't do that.
And then what I have to say to single people, married people,
people in between, people who don't know what they want
or what they're going to do, is that we live in wonderful times.
This is a time when more so than any other time in history, people, if you have the resources,
and granted, not everybody does, but if you have the resources, you can choose the life past that works for you,
whether that's single life, married life, something that's sort of in between, or if you want to go in between,
the different possibilities, all of those options are possible.
is no one blueprint for the good life. We can all get to choose the life paths that work best
for each of us as individuals. Well, Dr. DePaolo, thank you so much for joining us. This has been
a pleasure. Thank you. Thanks for listening. If you would like more information on the topics we
discussed or if you would like to hear more episodes, please go to our website at speakingof
psychology.org. With the American Psychological Association, Speaking of Psychology,
I'm Andre Hamilton.
