Early adulthood. In early adulthood, an individual is concerned with developing the ability to share intimacy, seeking to form relationships and find intimate love. Long‐term relationships are formed, and often marriage and children result. The young adult is also faced with career decisions.
Choices concerning marriage and family are often made during this period. Research shows that divorce is more likely among people who marry during adolescence, those whose parents were divorced, and those who are dissimilar in age, intelligence, personality, or attractiveness. Separation is also more frequent among those who do not have children. Most people who have divorced remarry; consequently, children may experience more than one set of parents.
Such alternatives to marriage as “living together” ( cohabitation) have become more common. In 1997, the Census Bureau estimated that 4.13 million unwed couples lived in the United States.
Work/career choice affects not only socioeconomic status but also friends, political values, residence location, child care, job stress, and many other aspects of life. And while income is important in both career selection and career longevity, so are achievement, recognition, satisfaction, security, and challenge. In the modern cultures of many nations, the careers of both spouses or partners frequently must be considered in making job choices.
Middle adulthood. In middle adulthood, an important challenge is to develop a genuine concern for the welfare of future generations and to contribute to the world through family and work. Erik Erikson refers to the problem posed at this stage as generativity vs. self‐absorption.
Robert Havighurst lists seven major tasks in the middle years.
accepting and adjusting to physiological changes, such as menopause
reaching and maintaining satisfaction in one's occupation
adjusting to and possibly caring for aging parents
helping teenage children to become responsible adults
achieving adult social and civic responsibility
relating to one's spouse as a person
developing leisure‐time activities
While a midlife crisis is not regarded as a universal phenomenon, during one's 40s and 50s comes the recognition that more than half of one's life is gone. That recognition may prompt some to feel that the clock is ticking and that they must make sudden, drastic changes in order to achieve their goals, while others focus on finding satisfaction with the present course of their lives.
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Physical & Cognitive Development in Middle Adulthood
middle adulthood | The developmental period that begins at approximately 40 to 45 years of age and extends to about 60 to 65 years of age. |
chronic disorders | Disorders that are characterized by slow onset and long duration. |
climacteric | The midlife transition in which fertility declines. |
menopause | Cessation of a woman’s menstrual periods, usually in the late forties or fifties. |
erectile dysfunction | The inability to adequately achieve and maintain an erection that results in satisfactory sexual performance. |
crystallized intelligence | Accumulated information and verbal skills, which increase in middle adulthood, according to Horn. |
fluid intelligence | The ability to reason abstractly, which begins to decline from middle adulthood on, according to Horn. |
working memory | The mental “workbench,” where individuals manipulate and assemble information when decision making, problem solving, and comprehending language. |
leisure | The pleasant times after work when individuals are free to pursue activities and interests of their own choosing. |
meaning-making coping | Involves drawing on beliefs, values, and goals to change the meaning of a stressful situation, especially in times of chronic stress as when a loved one dies. |
contemporary life-events approach | Approach emphasizing that how a life event influences the individual’s development depends not only on the life event, but also on mediating factors, the individual’s adaptation to the life event, the lifestage context, and the sociohistorical context. |
social clock | The timetable according to which individuals are expected to accomplish life’s tasks, such as getting married, having children, or establishing themselves in a career. |
Big Five factors of personality | Emotional stability (neuroticism), extraversion, openness to experience, agreeableness, and conscientiousness. |
empty nest syndrome | A decrease in marital satisfaction after children leave home, because parents derive considerable satisfaction from their children. |
Created by: RLD