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Read previewIf one wanted to be cynical about the length of today’s romantic relationships, it wouldn’t be hard. At first glance, they’re all quite different: Rita Smith and Theodore Smith, Sr. are devout Christians in New Orleans, Louisiana who speak openly about their sex life on TikTok . Yet for all their differences, the couples all share some core commonalities that make their relationships so successful. “It gets you stimulated, and when you do go home, the next thing you know you want to take your bath and be sexual again,” Rita Smith, 62, said. “I like to have this pink piece around my neck, it just makes me feel more sexy,” Rita Smith said.
Persons: , centenarians, , Robert Waldinger, Marc Schulz, who’ve, Rita Smith, Theodore Smith, Beverly Palmer, Dr, Richard C, Palmer, Bert Morton, Lee Korty, Bryan Tarnowski, Rita, , ” Rita Smith, Richard, ” Bert Morton, ” Morton, Peyton Fulford, Morton, Korty, ” Korty, Beverly, ” Beverly Palmer, Jess T, Dugan, ” Theodore Smith Organizations: Service, Business, ” Harvard, BI, Palmers, Smiths Locations: New Orleans, Louisiana, California, Springfield , Illinois
Even as Airbnb's popularity and private valuation soared throughout the 2010s, Chesky didn't feel successful, he said — and he thought taking the company public would help. The Airbnb CEO originally moved to Silicon Valley and started his company in 2008 with co-founders Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. In response, Chesky dedicated all his energy to making Airbnb more successful, hoping it'd fulfill him, he said. The ongoing research, which started in 1938, has found that career and financial success don't make participants feel more content. Six months later, the company launched its Airbnb Rooms service, which allows hosts to rent out individual bedrooms in their homes.
Persons: Brian Chesky, Dax Shepard's, Chesky, , Joe Gebbia, Nathan Blecharczyk, it'd, Marc Schulz, Warren Buffett Organizations: Harvard University, Reuters, San Locations: Silicon Valley, San Francisco, Airbnb
People who fare the best in retirement find ways to cultivate connections with others, according to Harvard's 85-year happiness study. In 1938, Harvard researchers embarked on a study that continues to this day to find out: What makes us happy in life? As participants entered mid- and late-life, the Harvard Study often asked about retirement. 1 challenge people faced in retirement was not being able to replace the social connections that had sustained them for so long at work. Retirees don't miss working, they miss the peopleWhen it comes to retirement, we often stress about things like financial concerns, health problems and caregiving.
In 1938, Harvard researchers embarked on a decades-long study to find out: What make us happy in life? The most consistent finding we've learned through 85 years of study is: Positive relationships keep us happier, healthier, and help us live longer. 1 key to a happy life: 'Social fitness'Relationships affect us physically. But our social life is a living system, and it needs exercise. Romantic intimacy: Do you feel satisfied with the amount of romantic intimacy in your life?
NEW YORK, Feb 6 (Reuters) - For generations, society has grappled with the question of whether money brings happiness. That's according to the findings of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, the world's longest study on happiness. In the Harvard study, the sample of participants with “more prestigious jobs and more money were no happier in their lives,” Schulz says. “Rather than buying a bigger house or a nicer car, if you use your money to share experiences with others, that money will get you a better return on happiness,” Schulz says. DO A MINI-HARVARD STUDY – ON YOURSELFHow the Harvard Study operates is by checking in with respondents – 724 original participants, some of whom are still around, and 1,300 descendants – for occasional reflection and self-evaluation.
When it comes to understanding what happens to people as they go through life, pictures of entire lives—of the choices people make and the paths they follow, and how it all works out for them—are almost impossible to get. Most of what we know about human life we know from asking people to remember the past, and memories are full of holes. The more time that passes, the more details we forget, and research shows that the act of recalling an event can actually change our memory of it. 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 matters to a person’s health and happiness, and which investments really paid off?
‘The Good Life’ Review: The Habit of Happiness
  + stars: | 2023-01-12 | by ( Richard J. Mcnally | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
What constitutes a life well-lived? In their captivating book “The Good Life: Lessons From the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness,” the psychiatrist Robert Waldinger and the clinical psychologist Marc Schulz convey key lessons that arise from studying the lifetimes of hundreds of individuals across the 20th and 21st centuries. Dr. Waldinger teaches at Harvard Medical School; Mr. Schulz at Bryn Mawr. They are the current directors of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, an investigation now in its 85th year of data collection. The purpose of both studies, long since merged, was to identify predictors of health, happiness and flourishing in young adulthood and beyond.
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