Hidden Brain - The Best Years of Your Life
Episode Date: June 26, 2023Aging isn’t just a biological process. Our outlook and emotions also change as we age, often in ways that boost our well-being. Psychologist Laura Carstensen unpacks the science behind this surprisi...ng finding, and shares what all of us can learn from older people.Have you ever been torn about whether to pursue a passion project? In the latest episode of Hidden Brain+, novelist and physician Abraham Verghese tells us about the person who helped him navigate this dilemma in his own life. Try Hidden Brain+ for free on the Apple Podcasts app or at apple.co/hiddenbrain.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
In one of the movie versions of the Oscar Wilde novel, the picture of Dorian Gray,
the actor heard Hatfield stares longingly at a painting of himself.
The picture shows a young man bursting with health and vitality,
as Dorian Gray reflects on how he is going to change with age while his picture will stay the same.
A strange wish passes through his head.
Only the picture could change, and I could be always what I am now.
For that I would give everything.
There is nothing in the whole world I would not give.
I would give myself a hand.
In the story, Dorian Gray makes a pact with a devil. The painting starts to age in his place.
The physical degradation of the picture isn't only about the passing years,
the picture takes on the corruption of the characters many mistakes.
Meanwhile, Dorian Gray himself stays eternally youthful.
stays eternally youthful.
Oscar Wilde wrote the story in the late 19th century. The movie came out in the middle of the 20th century.
The 21st century is not that different in its preoccupations from its predecessors.
Movies, TV shows and the fashion industry still worship at the altar of youth.
People around the world spend billions of dollars on potions and injections and surgical interventions
to keep the signs of age at bay.
Clickbait ads on many websites show you what the youthful stars of yesterdays look like today.
The message couldn't be clearer.
Aging is a terrible thing.
Growing old is a horror show.
This week on Hidden Brain,
astonishing new research about aging
that could change the way everyone thinks about life. If you're short, you don't know what it feels like to be tall.
If you're white, you won't know what it's like to be black.
Lots of aspects of identity are like this.
They are fixed.
But there is one form of identity that
is certain to change with time. Young people today will become old people tomorrow.
But while growing old is inevitable, it comes with so much psychological and cultural
baggage that lots of us avoid thinking about it. In popular culture, getting old means getting kicked out. Lots of elderly people discover that aging makes them invisible to others.
At Stanford University, psychologist Laura Carstensen has focused her attention on the topic of aging. She has discovered some astonishing things.
Laura Carstensen, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thank you.
Pleasure to be with you. Laura, I want to take you back to 1974 when you were 21
years old. Like many young people on the Cusp of adulthood, you didn't give much
thought to aging. What would you say your priorities were at this time of your
life? My priorities were dating, exploring, and thinking
about future jobs and possibilities and where I would live and what I was going to do the
next day, the next week, the next year. Not a lot about my future. I didn't think at all
about aging. Your life changed very dramatically one night that year.
I understand that you and some friends were going to a concert.
Tell me what happened, Laura.
I worked as a waitress in a restaurant and a bunch of us after closing decided we would
go to a concert.
It was about an hour outside of town and we divided up into cars, drove out and we went to this concert. It was about an hour outside of town and we, you know, divided up into cars, drove
out and we went to this concert. At the end of the evening, we said, well, let's go back
and play some pools. So we divided up again into different cars and started to head back
to town. I happened to get in the car with a man I hardly knew who was very drunk and caught on to that pretty quickly and asked
him to stop. I remember putting my hand out on the dashboard as he was going ever faster
and that was the last thing I remembered before waking up in a ditch on the side of the
road. He drove off the road and rolled down an embankment.
The car turned two or three times over.
And I broke about 20 plus bones, but my left leg was injured most badly.
My femur cracked in half, and I had many other fractures through the knee and the ankle.
And I cracked ribs, I had concussion, lots of facial lacerations, lots and lots of injuries.
I'm assuming there were a bunch of surgeries that must have followed this and sort of very intense
hospitalization here.
Yes. For the first couple of weeks, they couldn't do surgery because I had been injured so badly,
they couldn't give me anesthesia. So those were the toughest two weeks.
And then they began a surgery, but mostly they just kept my leg hanging in the air.
It's that cartoonish image, you know, you have if someone laying in a hospital bed
and the leg is being held upwards and that would keep it somewhat straight.
Was there a period in this window, Laura, where people were afraid that you might
not make it? I mean, it sounds like this was a very, very serious crash.
And the injuries were really serious. Yes. Certainly, there was the expectation that I may not make it.
I remember at a point during that time, I wished I wouldn't make it. In hindsight, I remember thinking
there are things worse than dying, but I kept sort of becoming unconscious but then coming out of it again in those early
days and you know eventually started to heal.
I'm wondering if your priorities changed around this time.
You know, you talked about how your priorities at age 21 were the priorities of anyone who
was age 21.
You're thinking about what's happening next week, next weekend.
You know, maybe thinking about your dating life, you're thinking about what's happening next week, next weekend, you may be thinking about your dating life, you're thinking about your career, how did that
worldview change as a result of the crash?
I like many people who have these near death experiences completely changed how I thought
about life.
And suddenly life was something I didn't take for granted anymore. And life wasn't
to be lived for fun and entertainment and exploration. I for the first time really saw how valuable
time was.
Laura's social world changed, too. A large circle of acquaintances was replaced by a bright spotlight on a small group of family
and close friends.
And for that I felt incredible gratitude to be surrounded by people who really cared
about me and my parents came to visit, my siblings came to visit, my dad came every day.
And I don't know what I would have done without that connection to the outside world and without
the knowledge that I was embedded in a group of people who cared.
Tell me about your recovery. I understand that you were in the hospital for several months
as you were recovering from these injuries. The way I remember this was about a month
and a half before I thought about much of anything other than my injuries and how badly I had been hurt. But then I started to kind of wake up, if you will,
and I started to get bored. It's a, when you lay flat on your back with your leg up in the air,
strung up in the air, and there's just so much you can do day to day. And I got really bored.
Laura's father, who was a professor,
offered her a way out of her boredom.
He had always wanted me to go to college.
I had not gone to college up to that point.
I was 21 in this accident.
And he suggested when I complained about being bored
that maybe I should take a course.
And I was kind of resistant to it.
And he said, really, just name a course
and he would go tape the lectures and bring them to me.
So I took introductory psychology
as a hospital patient laying flat on my back
with my leg tied in the air.
Wait, so your dad actually sat in the psychology classes and recorded them and brought you back
the cassettes to listen to?
My dad was a saint.
Yes.
My dad was a biophysicist by the way and when he first asked me what I wanted to take, I
was like saying, oh, not physics.
And he said, no, anything, anything.
And so, yes, he went to every lecture of introductory psychology with a tape recorder.
And tape recorded the lectures and brought them to me in the hospital.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah. So, while you were in the hospital, the nurses assigned you a task, which was also in some
ways perhaps a psychology workshop of talking with some of the elderly patients who were
in the same ward as you.
Why did they ask you to do that, Laura?
Well, I had gotten to know the nurses. Again, you're with the same people day after day,
and so we had begun to talk a little bit, and I complained to them about being bored, and
they said, we've got an assignment for you. There are a lot of older women who come into
the orthopedic ward, and we're're gonna put them in this room with you.
I was on a four bed ward.
And your job is to talk to them and keep them alert
and so they don't get confused and so on.
So we're giving you that job.
So two things happened.
One, I'm taking introductory psychology
and the second one is I've now been assigned
to talk to older women.
Hmm.
Now, I can't tell whether this is a psychological intervention
to help you or a psychological intervention
to help the people you were talking with,
but perhaps it was both at the same time.
Well, really, this was about helping me.
They were trying to give me a gift of a job.
They were trying to give me a gift of a job. Is there anything you glean from your time spent,
from the time you spent with these elderly patients in the ward?
So many things.
I learned so much from this experience about aging.
For one, their lives were so different from one another.
And their personalities and their outlooks on life For one, their lives were so different from one another.
And their personalities and their outlooks on life
were so different from one another.
That to the extent that I had stereotypes
about what older people were like,
they went quite far in challenging those stereotypes.
One woman that I shared a room with was a matriarch
of her family family and these young
kids would come in and sit on the bed and talk to her. There were other women who were
really sad, really in a tough situation. I remember one woman in the hospital room who
had to sell her home in order to pay the hospital bill before they
would discharge her and so she had to be transferred to a nursing home instead of
back to her own home and it was all for financial reasons. There was another
woman who just kind of laid in her bed and stared at the ceiling all day and
you know the physicians would come in they'd surround my bed they'd be trying to
do all sorts of things to help rehabilitate me, get me better, thinking
about my future.
And then they would just wave to her on the way out the door, say, hey, Sadie, just keep
going.
They didn't pay much attention to her at all.
There was another insight I had from spending so much time with these older women who were
also spending all their days in bed, being cared for by other people.
And that insight was just how much we had in common.
So I was 21 and these women were, you know,
in their 70s and 80s and probably 90s.
But we were all dependent on other people for everything
from, you know, being fed to staying clean,
to having any social interaction.
I mean, everything we were dependent on.
So suddenly, I shared these characteristics
that I would have thought of as characteristics of old people,
or sick people, but now it was me too.
And so that also changed.
And it made me think about the world
and how the world comes to shape who we are.
And the one insight I had about aging,
or at least was at the beginnings of my thinking about aging,
was that aging is a biological process,
but it's driven, shaped by the social world.
And that was the insight that led me to be interested in the science of aging.
Laura spent four months in the hospital. After she was discharged,
she was in a wheelchair for a while and then walked with a cane for several years after that.
and then walked with a cane for several years after that. While she gradually recovered from her injuries, the hospital experience stayed with her.
She finished college, went to graduate school, and decided to become a researcher who studies the science of aging.
She was soon to discover a phenomenon that affects not just the elderly, but everyone at every stage of life.
That's when we come back.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Laura Carstensen is a psychologist at Stanford University.
She's the founding director of the Stanford Center on Longevity.
When she was a young woman, she sustained some serious injuries in a car crash.
As she recovered in the hospital, she found herself surrounded by elderly patients with many informaties.
The experience helped her decide to specialize
in the science of aging.
Laura, when you started your career
as a psychologist in the early 1980s,
there was a scientific consensus
about what it meant to grow old.
Was it fair to say that that consensus was a grim one?
Oh, it was grim indeed.
Aging was considered to be a serious threat to virtually everyone's mental health.
There was a clinical psychology textbook that I had when I was in graduate school.
So this was a textbook on psychopathology.
They had a chapter on anxiety, a chapter on depression, a chapter on drug abuse,
and then they end a chapter on old age.
So old age itself was considered pathological.
And I'm assuming that when scientists were talking
about the pathologies of old age,
they were referring to things like declines
in cognitive function, impairments in memory,
depression, anxiety, a whole range of problems.
The whole range.
And you know, at the time, people also believed that Alzheimer's disease was the inevitable consequence of aging.
So that cognitive impairment would begin and would eventually progress to dementia,
so that that was the fate of people who lived very long lives.
So soon after you started working as an academic, the National Institute of Mental Health funded
a study to assess the prevalence of psychiatric disorders.
What did it find and what was its impact on your Laura?
Yes, this was an epidemiological catchment area study of mental health, conducted in
the early 1980s,
and it was not a study designed about old age at all.
It was a study that was designed
so that the researchers could get a better estimate
of different forms of psychopathology in the community.
And so what they did was to have trained clinicians
go out into the communities and interview a representative sample of people in a number of different geographical areas around the country.
So it was, it was the best epidemiological study of mental health that had been done in this country, probably anywhere at the time. The results of it were to give them pretty good estimates of the prevalence of
anxiety, depression, bobias, etc., etc. And one of the findings that was embedded in this set of
findings about prevalence was that the prevalence of every form of psychopathology with the exception
of the dimensions was observed at lower rates
and older people than middle aged or younger people.
And this really turned on its head the idea that psychopathology,
mental health problems, depression, anxiety,
were part and parcel of growing old.
The National Institute of Mental Health Study was studying emotions associated with psychiatric
disorders.
Laura wanted to broaden the picture.
What were the everyday emotions experienced by people who were young, middle aged, and
elderly?
To find out, she ran a study that measured the daily emotions of people ranging in age from 18 to 94.
We studied a whole range of positive emotions
and negative emotions.
We wanted to understand what emotional experience
in day-to-day life was like.
So we knew from this large study of mental health problems that they had
lower rates of that, but we didn't know a lot about what day-to-day emotional life was
like an old age. And so at the time we designed a study using what was then the gold standard,
probably still is, of studying emotional experience in day- day to day life. And we gave people
pages, electronic pages, and they carried them for a week. And at random times, during each of seven
days, we paged them and asked them to tell us the extent to which they were feeling each of 19
different emotions. Some were positive emotions like joy, happiness, calm, some were negative
emotions like anger, sadness, fear. And so we had this detailed record now for individuals
about their emotional lives. So the NIMH study was finding that older people, in fact, were not suffering from higher levels
of psychopathology.
You were studying, if you will, more ordinary emotions, everyday emotions.
What did you find in terms of the everyday emotions of the young, the middle aged, and
the elderly?
We found that increasingly older people had fewer negative emotions,
less anger reported, less fear, less disgust,
and just as much happiness joy calm.
And so this was consistent with these findings
about psychopathology as well, right?
Now we had a normal healthy population from the community,
and we were observing something similar.
Now, it must have felt a bit like a head scratch or given all that we had heard about how aging is a horror show,
did you ever worry that you had something wrong in the data?
It wasn't just us who worried about it. It was the whole field that was in disbelief. So the general public kind of didn't buy it. More importantly,
the scientific community was very eager to scrutinize these findings and figure out what was wrong.
And in science, nothing better can happen than that. Having a finding that, you know, lots of other
laboratories, lots of other investigators say, I don't quite believe it, I'm gonna look at it this way.
Maybe X explains it, maybe Y explains it.
So there was one alternative that people were reporting
that they were happy because they didn't have
the cognitive ability to really ruminate
and generate lots of negative emotions.
If you can't remember how upset you were yesterday and how people treated you, to be able to do that. I think that's a very, very important thing. I think that's a very important thing. I think that's a very important thing.
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why, you know, you're happy.
Lots of studies have looked at the relationship between everything from executive functioning
and education to intelligence and this positive outlook on life.
And it's the reverse.
So people with the highest levels of executive function
and cognitive abilities and education, those are the ones showing this effect, the strongest,
so we ruled that one out. Then there was a hypothesis generated by
many in the field of psychiatry that was called masked depression. That is, really older people were terribly depressed,
but they were covering that up
because it was a way of keeping it from others,
but more importantly, fooling themselves.
So we did studies and others did studies
where we would have people experience
different kinds of emotions while they were in brain scanners
and be able to look at activation of different regions of the brain.
And again, you couldn't explain it through a lack of activation. And a lot of
research was done to try to explain or reconcile that this was really just
cognitive impairment or brain impairment. it was really about something else,
but with every study it became clear
that this was a highly reliable finding.
Older people were happier in their day-to-day lives
on balance than younger people were.
So eventually the weight of all this evidence
convinced even the skeptics and the finding
that older people were in fact happier than younger people was dubbed the paradox of aging.
What was the paradox, Laura?
Well the paradox really was that aging entails a lot of bad things.
You know, cognitively people often do change, feel,
that memory isn't as good, attention is tougher to keep in focus,
not to mention the physical changes with age.
Most of us experience more aches and pains.
So all these things are changing.
And then we're in the societal context.
People aren't taking us as seriously as they used to.
There's an invisibility people talk about when they get old that people walk almost right through
them and they're just not noticed. And so if all of that's happening with aging and there it is,
how could it be that older people are emotionally doing well?
I mean, and it does seem like a mystery because of course, social status, physical health,
friendship networks can become more limited, social engagement can decline.
And you would think that if all those things happen, if you had less social status, less
physical health, a smaller network, less levels, lower levels of social engagement, you would
predict that
the people would then have worse psychological health and yet psychological well-being seemed
to be improving.
Yeah, it challenged all of our basic assumptions about what gives us happiness, right?
It's having a lot of friends.
It's having a bright future.
The older we get, the closer we are to death,
you know, how could it possibly be that people get happier?
So as you were trying to tease apart this mystery, in some ways, the fact that the data coming in
was so at odds with intuitions and cultural beliefs that many people had about aging,
you stumbled on an answer to that mystery one day as you were interviewing a pair of elderly siblings, Laura.
Yes. One day I interviewed two sisters who lived together in an apartment in San Francisco.
It was an apartment that housed a lot of older people. And they were talking to me about how sad they were that they had lost many good friends
and relatives as they had gotten older.
And I said to them, oh, what about new friends?
There are a lot of people who live here in this building and you reach out to them, you
want to make new friends.
And I remember them giving me this kind of blank stare like you just don't get it.
And they said, Laura, we don't have time for those people. And I looked at them and first thought,
you don't have time? Come on, you've got a lot of time on your hands, don't you? And then I went
away and they were kind enough to send me off and be sweet to me.
But I went home and I remember sitting at my dining room table
staring out at the San Francisco skyline.
And it was this moment where I feel like I had kind of an epiphany
where I said, it's about time.
And I realized that it wasn't about time in the day,
it was about time left in life.
And if our time horizons are changing,
if they're getting shorter as we grow older that our goals
made systematically change.
And everything in my life and my research changed after that evening.
Laura's epiphany was quickly followed by a second moment of insight.
She realized her own life contained a case study of the very phenomenon the elderly siblings
had demonstrated to her.
She thought back to the time she had come close to dying at the age of 21.
She remembered how her priorities, her social world, had changed dramatically.
I didn't know that I was going to make it through those months of recuperating and the idea
of exploring this very large world full of possibilities was of no interest to me either
during that time.
But I did care about things.
It wasn't a flattening of emotions.
It was a very sharp focus of what matters and what doesn't.
And it's very much tied to time, time left.
When we come back, the powerful force
that shapes us throughout our lives
from youth to old age.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. them.
This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Laura Karstensen is a psychologist at Stanford University.
She's the author of a long, bright future, happiness, health and financial security in an
age of increased longevity.
While conducting research on the surprising emotional resilience of elderly people, Laura
identified a powerful subterranean force that was shaping the outlook of the individual
she studied.
This force had to do with how people of different ages
and people at different life stages
perceive the amount of time they have left in their lives.
Humans, to the best of our knowledge,
are the only species that appreciates our mortality
throughout most of our lives.
So there are other species like elephants, lions,
they probably know when they are dying.
But we anticipate how much time we have left throughout the course of our lives.
And we do this subconsciously most of the time.
And then every once in a while events occur that prime mortality, it could be the death
of a friend or a terrorist attack, you know, a war, something happens that reminds
us that we're mortal and we're not going to live forever.
We don't have all the time in the world.
And as we get older, we increasingly experience those kinds of reminders.
And so we come to take account of time and value time differently. Goals change systematically as our time horizons change.
So let's delve into that with a little more detail. When we are younger, take for example the
undergraduates that you're teaching at Stanford. Obviously they are young people, they have their
entire lives in front of them. What are that time horizons?
And how does it affect how they're thinking, Laura?
It's an interesting question, because when we began this,
we thought younger people think about their futures a lot,
and they envision their futures is very, very long.
It turns out the more we've studied this,
that a clear answer, more accurate answer,
is that younger people don't think
there are any constraints on time.
So they don't think about the future so much
in terms of how much left there is.
It's that it's just vast, it's abundant.
They don't need to think about time.
And it's really the shift as we grow older,
where we come to think about time more,
how much time we have left.
But for young people, they have all the time
in the world, essentially.
So as we get older, the shifting time horizon has a number of different kinds of effects
on our lives and our choices.
We talked briefly about this before, but one of the effects is on our social relationships.
What is the effect of our shrinking time horizons on our social relationships, Laura?
Social networks get smaller as people get older. And I should note that this was part of the thinking about the paradox of aging. You know, because social relationships are what bring us
our greatest happiness, there was thinking that if networks and older people
were smaller than they were in younger people,
then older people must not be as happy.
That was basically the thinking.
Instead, it appears that what happens is that over time,
social networks get smaller, but they're very well honed.
And so the people who are retained in the networks
are those that are most important.
The people who are most predictable, most valuable
in our lives.
And those are the relationships that stay.
And we let these other more distant acquaintance
like relationships fade away.
But what it means in is that our social networks, as we get older,
are more emotionally dense. They're people who we really care about. And so there's a real benefit
to that kind of a social network.
You know, there are so many jokes about how the elderly are incurious.
They're stuck in their ways.
You know, you can't teach an old dog new tricks.
But party what I'm hearing you say is that the old dogs' old tricks are actually pretty
good.
Yeah.
The old dog is pretty happy with those tricks.
Exactly.
I try to explain this to undergraduates who are having a hard time grasping that.
Like, I say, imagine that you only had one week left
in a city that you'd been exploring.
Do you want to try another new restaurant
or do you want to go to your favorite restaurant
in that last time out?
And I think that's some of what's happening with age.
Exploration is extremely adaptive
when time horizons are long.
We need to learn, we need to explore, we need to collect
because those kinds of things could be useful.
And especially if your time horizon is so vast, right?
Anything could happen.
So meeting somebody at a party,
even somebody you may not particularly like,
could end up being an important contact five years from now when you're looking for a job. So
people are collecting and they're very open to that. But as time horizons are shorter,
we focus. We focus, we savor, we see better what's important and what's not.
Another change that accompanies old age
and one that also appears to be driven
by shortened time horizons
is a shift in the kinds of information
to which older people attend.
Tell us more about this Laura.
I think this is one of the most interesting findings.
Brains do not take in information evenly,
but rather goals direct our attention,
goals direct our memories,
goals direct cognitive resources.
And so with colleagues of mine,
Mara Mather and Susan Charles,
we began to think one day about whether these changes
and goals that we had documented widely
in social preferences and social networks would be
represented in fundamental aspects of cognitive processing.
And we began to run a study which since has become widely replicated, but it was a study
where we presented positive, negative, and neutral stimuli to younger middle-aged and older
adults.
And we had them sit in front of a computer screen and they would go through the images.
And then after they've done this viewing, tell us all the images you remember.
And what we find is that younger people remember almost the same numbers of positive and negative images. By middle age we see a preference
and memory for the positive images and an old age that preference is whopping. That is older people
are remembering almost exclusively the positive images and they're not recalling the negative
and nor the neutral ones. And so that was the first time we'd seen this. It was a little
surprising to us because we weren't exactly clear why people would selectively
attend to positive and not negative too because negative could be emotionally
meaningful. And we thought this was super interesting. We then ran a study of
autobiographical memory, again same finding, using neuroimaging, where you look at
a migdala activation in response to the negative, the neutral, the positive. And again, what we see
is more of a migdala activation in response to positive viewing than the viewing of negative images
in older people. And again, let me loop this back to some of the thinking about how negative aging was
years ago. Prior to the study we did, and this was a study published in the early 2000s,
but prior to that, there'd only been one study where they looked at a migdala activation in response
to emotional stimuli, but the researchers had only used negative stimuli, and older people didn't remember them as well.
And so the conclusion was that the amygdala's broken.
I mean, there's some neural impairment.
But what we showed is the amygdala's activated just fine
in response to positive stimuli.
And many people, by the way, think of the amygdala
as more of a salience indicator than emotion per se, right?
So it's what is capturing attention,
what's valuable in attention.
And since then, as I say,
there are now hundreds of studies showing the positivity effect.
This is actually striking because, of course,
there's also a wide literature across the social sciences
generally arguing that bad news is perceived more strongly than good news, right?
It's sometimes called a bad news bias.
But what you're saying is that really that might actually have an interesting intersection
with age.
Exactly.
So people have long believed that negative stimuli have powerful adaptive, evolutionarily
based value.
And so, of course, people, and that was the way
these studies were described, people will pay more attention
to negative stimuli than positive.
However, people, as it turns out, were young college students
and virtually all of these studies.
So we were generalizing from what younger people were
observed to do to humans writ large. And actually what we see now, if we look at
the the body of research that has emerged since we first identified the
positivity effect and cognitive processing, is that there's a gradual age
effect in it. And yes, younger people pay more attention to negative stimuli than positive,
and then gradually that not only diminishes, but heightened attention to positive emerges.
Another effect that you and other researchers have examined that looks at the effect of shrinking
time horizons is how focused people are on the present
versus the past or the future. Talk about this idea, Laura.
There is a stereotype of older people that they live in the past and think largely about the past.
There's also a literature in clinical psychology showing that when people think about the past, they're more likely to be depressed. So that kind of pattern was, you know, long believed to capture the obvious depression.
We would see an older people, but of course, they're not depressed.
And here's the finding. They also don't think about the past anymore than younger people do.
But they don't think about the future as much as younger people do.
So younger people are rarely in a present-focused mode.
They're almost always thinking about the future.
Older people can actually be in the present, and that tends to be very good for mental health.
There are lots of meditations now, Buddhist meditations that are intended to help people
get to that present focus because living in the moment tends to take people's attention
to positive aspects of the world.
So in many ways, it strikes me that your focus on the effects of time horizons means that
this is not really about
aging in a chronological sense. It's more about the psychology of how we perceive time.
Does this mean that if you experimentally induce younger people to feel like that time horizons are short, that this would then change how they feel and behave? Isn't that exciting? Yes, it does.
Isn't that exciting? Yes, it does. Sarah Barber, a psychologist who works also with Mara Mother, ran a study about five years ago
where they induced endings, mortality, you're approaching the end of your life,
and they did this kind of imagery induction with younger people, and then presented them with
stimuli, positive, negative, neutral, and younger people also showed this shift and a favoring a preference for positive information in attention and memory.
What's most exciting actually about this whole line of work is we've been able, in most cases, to just lift age out of the equation and say, it's time, it's our beliefs, it's our perceptions, it's our sense
of a future that affect the goals that we pursue in everyday life.
I'm wondering on a college campus, whether you can see interesting differences between
people who are freshmen and people who are seniors, because in some ways you almost have
a natural experiment that's unfolding of people who have a sense of a long time horizon and people who have a sense
of a short time horizon, at least on campus.
Yes, you can compare returning sophomores to graduating seniors and their social preferences
for spending time with others.
And as you've anticipated, the returning sophomores are interested in meeting
new people and the graduating seniors are not interested in meeting new people. They're interested
in spending time with their very good friends. Does the effect run in reverse as well? What happens
when older people are asked to imagine that they have more time left to live? We ran an experiment where we ask exactly that question.
We thought, wow, we can make young people old.
Can we make old people young?
And so in one study before we ask people
to choose from among an array of social partners,
we said, now imagine that you just received a phone call
from your physician who told you about a new medical advance
that virtually insures
you'll live about 20 years longer than you expected in relatively good health.
Who do you choose?
And now older people were no longer expressing preferences for these very well-known friends
and loved ones.
They were interested in exploration and novelty too.
So I love this because in some ways what you're really identifying is sort of the underlying
psychological mechanism here regardless of whether people are old or young, it does
happen to be the fact that older people because they have a more limited time horizon, I'm
behaving in a certain way but you can induce them to behave differently.
I'm wondering once you understand this underlying psychological mechanism, what the implications
of this are, are
they benefits to pulling back the curtain and looking at how our sense of time left in
life might be affecting us?
I believe that there are.
So occasionally I'll give a talk to a largely young audience about these findings, and
somebody inevitably comes up to me after the talk and says, how do I get to be more like
an old person?
I'd really like to be that. And then what I say is it's not a good idea,
that it's adaptive to explore, to learn, and it entails taking risks, including emotional risks.
But it's good to do that when you're preparing for a long future. And when you don't have to prepare for a long future, then you can focus on
what really matters. So in some ways aging relieves us of the burden of the future. We can be in
the moment, and that's adaptive to do that. Now, that said, it will be great if we can find ways
to have younger people step out of that future-oriented mode occasionally and
really experience the present.
See what's positive in the world.
This would be really good for them, I believe.
And just the same, there are context occasions where it's really good for older people to
think about the future, the long-term future, and not just the present.
Think of a climate change, for example.
Probably not going to affect somebody too much who's very old today,
but good to pay attention to it.
And so, yes, we should be able to time travel
so we can step into the future or step into the present.
I'm wondering whether you do this in your own life, Laura.
Having done this research now, do you try and apply this?
Do you actually catch yourself at various points in your day,
saying, you know, here's how my time horizons are shaping
how I think, and maybe I want to make that choice more mindfully?
I try to take the findings to heart, and there are a couple things I do.
One is something will happen to me during the day
as these things happen to all of us, right? It's just really irritating or something where I just
keep going over it and over it in my head again. Like, I wish I said this to someone so, you know,
and what. And it really helps to put it in perspective. Like, if this were the last month of your
life, would you care? And the answer is always, no.
And so being able to do that, I do think helps. And then there are moments where I can get lost
in staring out the window of my office at home
where there are a number of trees and gold finches
and bush tits and blue jays. And they're're always out there and I can just stop and really just
love them, you know, just love that experience. And then quickly go back and begin to think about
what I have to do next and what paper is due and what email I need to return and I can go back to
that. But yeah, it's good to be able to step out of the future
demands occasionally.
You've written that you like to think of two older people in particular. They grew up together in
Q Gardens Hales in Queens, close friends who shared a love of music.
While still in their teenage years, they started recording songs together friends who share a love of music.
While still in their teenage years, they started recording songs together and they achieved
a lot of success, but over time, disagreements, flared, resentments accumulated, and they
mostly stopped speaking to each other.
Decades later, when these two men were past 60, they elected to put their differences
aside, and I want to play you a clip of them singing together. Oh. Can you imagine us years from today?
Sharing appointments quietly
Up to the least strange to be sending?
Oh, friends. Laura, I'm wondering what the story of Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel can tell us about friendship
and forgiveness over a lifetime.
I think there's something powerful to that, and I don't think it's very well understood
in the science.
But there is evidence that older people are more likely to forgive and that marriages
improve.
And this is research that comes from John Gottman and Bob Levinson and I that we did together
on older marriages, even unhappily married couples are happier as they get older.
And I think some of that is they come to where the years that they weathered as a badge of honor,
you know, they share something together and come to take pride in that and to begin to say,
you may not be perfect, but you're mine. And there's something really moving about that.
Long ago it must be I have a photograph
Preserve your memories, they're all that's left here Music
Psychologist Laura Carstensen works at Stanford University.
Laura, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
It's a pleasure. Thank you.
Music is a pleasure. Thank you.
If you have follow up questions for Laura Carsten sin about the signs of aging and are willing to have those questions shared with a larger hidden brain audience, please record a voice
memo on your phone and email it to us at ideas at hiddenbrain.org. 60 seconds is plenty.
Please remember to include your name and a
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Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Annie Murphy Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quarelle, Ryan Katz,
Odin Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our unsung hero today is a former contributor to Hidden Brain.
Dan Pink is the well-known
author of many books, including most recently, The Power of Regret, how looking backward
moves us forward. Dan used to be my sparring partner many years ago on a Hidden Brain
segment we called Stop What Science. Some time ago, Dan and I were on a walk in Washington, DC, and he mentioned the work of a
Stanford psychologist named Laura Carstensen. Dan isn't old, but he is an old soul. He's
also an unusually generous human being. After hearing Laura explain the connections between
age, wisdom, and generosity, it all makes sense to me now. Thank you, Dad.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon.