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Adulthood
Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
Chapter 12: Adulthood
Case Study: The Sandwich Generation
Section 1: Young Adulthood
Section 2: Middle Adulthood
Section 3: Late Adulthood
Section 4: Death and Dying
Simulation: Applying What You’ve Learned
Adulthood
Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
Adults who care for their children as well as their parents belong to the
“sandwich generation” and face unique care-giving challenges.
• Adults are living longer.
• Young adults are marrying later and starting families later.
• Few professional caregivers are available.
• About 20 million Americans belong to the sandwich generation.
What Creates the Sandwich?
Case Study: The Sandwich Generation
• Changes in work hours
• Stress
• Financial difficulties
• Less attention for spouses and children
• Renewed attachment to parents
Effects on Caregivers
Adulthood
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What do you think?
• What strain can shouldering responsibility for both one’s children and one’s aging parents place on a family?
• Do you think children should be expected to take care of their elderly parents? Why or why not?
Adulthood
Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
Adulthood
Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
Adulthood
Original Content Copyright by HOLT McDougal. Additions and changes to the original content are the responsibility of the instructor.
Young Adulthood
• Young adulthood is characterized by becoming independent from parental authority and trying new ways of doing things.
• Many young adults form lasting relationships and marry.
• Although most young couples marry because they are in love, many marriages in the United States end in divorce.
Section 1 at a Glance
Adulthood
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Reading Focus• What are some of the characteristics and goals of young adulthood?
• Why are marriage and relationships important parts of young adulthood?
• How does divorce affect parents and children?
Main Idea
During young adulthood, most men and women become independent, begin careers, and develop meaningful relationships.
Young Adulthood
Adulthood
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Why do some married couples come to look like each other?
Adulthood
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Young adulthood is characterized by a desire to try new
things and by changing relationships with parents.
• Once young adults reach their 30s, they often reevaluate the decisions they have made about their course in life.
• Reassessment may bring major life changes.
Reassessment
Characteristics and Goals
• The mid- to late-30s are often characterized by settling down or “planting roots.”
Settling Down
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Answer: to determine whether their chosen courses are the best ones for them
Analyze
Why do many men and women reassess their lives in their 30s?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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The development of an identity—who you are and what you stand for
—is an important part of adolescence and young adulthood.
• In most Western societies, patriarchy has dominated marriage, but now spouses are more likely to be viewed as equal partners.
• The concept of marrying for love emerged in the 1800s.
• Today companionship and intimacy are central to marriage.
History of Marriage
Marriage and Relationships
• Today young Americans typically select their own spouses.
• Influences over the choice include ethnicity, level of education, social class, religion, and similarity in age, values, and attitudes.
Choosing Spouses
Adulthood
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Click on the image above to play the Interactive.
Adulthood
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Answer: Marriage today may be based on equality between spouses, while marriage in the past may have been based on patriarchy. In addition, marriage today may be based on romantic love, while marriage in the past may have been based on the benefits for families.
Compare
How does marriage today compare with marriage in the past?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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The Costs of Divorce• Financial resources are usually divided in a divorce.
• Divorced mothers often have primary responsibility for children.
• Divorced fathers often have to pay child support and alimony.
• Most divorced people recover and the majority remarry.
Reasons for Divorce• One reason divorce is a common occurrence is because obtaining a
divorce is easier than it used to be.
• People may divorce due to spousal abuse, child abuse, infidelity, stress, or an inability to communicate.
Divorce
Adulthood
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The Children of Divorce• Divorce can be difficult for children, no matter what their age.
• Children of divorced people are more likely to have behavioral problems, engage in substance abuse, and earn lower grades in school.
• Boys often have greater problems than girls in adjusting to divorce.
• Psychologists usually advise parents who are getting divorced to:
– Try to agree on how they will interact with their children
– Help each other maintain a good parent-child relationship
– Avoid criticizing each other to or in front of their children
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Answer: People may divorce due to spousal abuse, child abuse, infidelity, stress, or an inability to communicate.
Summarize
Why do people divorce?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Middle Adulthood
• One of the greatest challenges facing middle-aged adults is retaining the ability to create, originate, and produce.
• During middle adulthood, many adults go through a period of reassessment and reevaluate what to do with the rest of their lives.
• Many middle-aged adults have to adjust to the changing needs of their children and deal with their own physical changes.
Section 2 at a Glance
Adulthood
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Reading Focus• What is generativity?
• Why do many adults experience a midlife transition?
• What life changes do people face in middle adulthood?
Main Idea
During middle adulthood, men and women continue to be creative in their careers, family life, and community. They also face new life changes as they grow older.
Middle Adulthood
Adulthood
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Is the midlife crisis a myth?
Adulthood
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• Middle adulthood spans the years from 40 to 65.
• Erik Erikson said that the greatest challenge facing middle adults is generativity—the ability to create, originate, and produce.
• Generativity adds meaning to the lives of adults and helps them to maintain and enhance their self-esteem.
• Erikson believed that adults who are not generative can become stagnant.
Generativity
Adulthood
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Answer: Adults can maintain generativity by creating, originating, and producing; specific examples might include improving methods and relationships in the workplace, guiding younger people, voting, and community service.
Identify Supporting Details
How can adults maintain generativity?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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The midlife transition is a period of middle adulthood
when people’s perspectives change in a major way. Many
people experience a midlife transition around the ages of
40 to 45.
• The midlife transition can trigger a second period of reassessment known as a midlife crisis.
• Journalist Gail Sheehy calls the years from 45 to 65 the “age of mastery.”
Midlife Crisis or Age of Mastery?
Transition
• The term middlescence is sometimes used to describe a period of searching that can resemble adolescence.
• Middlescence can involve a search for a second adulthood.
Middlescence
Adulthood
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Answer: with an acknowledgement of limitations or a sense of urgency; decision about what to do with rest of life
Summarize
How do many adults respond to the midlife transition?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Menopause• Menopause usually occurs in a woman’s late 40s or early 50s and is
marked by the end of menstruation.
• Menopause is normal and can be a healthy development in women’s lives.
The Empty-Nest Syndrome• Empty-nest syndrome is the term applied to feelings of emptiness
and loss parents sometimes feel after their children have left home to establish their own lives.
• Once the nest is “empty,” however, many people report positive changes in their lives.
Life Changes
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Answer: Menopause may be considered abnormal or a disease; it is frequently associated with mood swings and irritability
Make Generalizations
Why do many people have a negative attitude toward menopause?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Late Adulthood
• Regular exercise and a healthy diet can help older adults reduce the impact of the physical changes they undergo.
• People age as their cells age and begin to malfunction.
• Cognitive changes, including memory decline, occur in late adulthood, but most older adults do quite well intellectually.
• Aging involves social changes that involve work, family, and living arrangements.
• Older adults who age successfully continue to believe that life is meaningful and full.
Section 3 at a Glance
Adulthood
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Reading Focus• What physical changes are part of late adulthood?
• Why do people age?
• What cognitive changes occur in late adulthood?
• How do social changes affect older adults?
• How can older adults age successfully?
Main Idea
Late adulthood is a time of many changes—physical, cognitive, and social. The ways in which older adults handle all these changes can determine how successfully they age.
Late Adulthood
Adulthood
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What's the secret of long life?
Adulthood
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• Age 65 marks the beginning of late adulthood.
• Many physical changes take place in late adulthood.
• Some physical changes cause health problems.
• Older adults can do many things to maintain their health, strength, and energy.
• Regular exercise and a healthful diet can help older adults feel better and help them fight disease.
Physical Changes
Adulthood
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Answer: Older adults can exercise and eat healthy diets to maintain their health and strength.
Identify Supporting Details
What can older adults do to help maintain their health and strength?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Cellular Damage Theories• Cellular damage theories suggest that cells malfunction as a result
of damage, not heredity.
• Some scientists blame free radicals, or unstable molecules in our bodies, for damage.
• Cross-linking may be another cause of aging.
Programmed Theories• The developmental theories that maintain that aging is the result of
genetics are called programmed theories.
• These theories suggest that heredity and genetics play a significant role in the length of one’s life.
Why People Age
Adulthood
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Answer: programmed theories—people cannot control heredity or genetics; cellular damage theories—people have some degree of control over environmental toxins that may cause cellular damage
Contrast
What is a major difference between programmed theories and cellular damage
theories?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Alzheimer’s Disease• Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive form of mental deterioration
that affects about 10 percent of people over the age of 65 and nearly half of those over the age of 85.
• It is a disease and not a normal part of aging.
Senile Dementia• Dementia is the serious loss of cognitive functioning.
• People with dementia have major losses in memory and may have speech or motor problems.
• Dementia that occurs after age 65 is called senile dementia. Most cases occur in people over 80.
Cognitive Changes
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Vascular Dementia• Vascular dementia is another common kind of dementia.
• It can be caused by a stroke or by a decrease in the blood supply to the brain.
• Such a decrease happens when fatty deposits collect in the blood vessels that go to the brain.
Adulthood
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Answer: gradual deterioration of mental processes, reduced levels of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, and the build up of sticky plaque in the brain
Summarize
What are the characteristics of Alzheimer’s disease?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Grandparenthood• Grandparents often have more relaxed relationships with their
grandchildren than they had with their children.
• Increasing numbers of grandparents, however, take on the major responsibility of raising their grandchildren.
Retirement• Retirement can be voluntary or compulsory.
• People who retire from full-time work sometimes continue working part time, either paid or voluntary.
Social Changes
Adulthood
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Living Arrangements• Some Americans have stereotypes about older people’s living
arrangements.
• One stereotype portrays older people living with their children and another has them in nursing homes and other institutions. Yet another says that they buy condominiums or move to retirement communities in warmer climates.
• On the contrary, most older people are independent.
• Many are financially independent and own their own homes.
• Most remain in their hometowns.
• Nearly 30 percent of older people will spend some time in a nursing home, but people living in nursing homes usually are 80 or older.
Adulthood
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Answer: Older adults can provide wisdom, love, and support for their loved ones.
Make Generalizations
What role can older adults play in their loved ones’ lives?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Aging and Adjustment• Most people in their 70s report satisfaction with their lives.
• There is a correlation between socioeconomic status and health.
• Older people benefit from social support and feelings of personal well-being.
Ego Integrity• Erik Erikson believed that one challenge facing people in late
adulthood is how they maintain ego integrity—the belief that life is meaningful and worthwhile even when physical abilities are not what they used to be.
Successful Aging
Adulthood
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A Positive Outlook • A positive outlook is another component of successful aging.
Reshaping One’s Life
• Reshaping one’s life to focus on what is important is another component of successful aging.
Adulthood
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Self-Challenge• Another component of successful aging is challenging oneself.
• The formula is simple, can be used by everyone, and includes:
– Increasing participation in activities
– Making more close friends
– Visiting with family
– Spending quiet time reading and listening to music
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Answer: When older adults do not have positive outlooks, they may die sooner than their counterparts with positive outlooks.
Identify Cause and Effect
What can happen when older adults do not have a positive outlook?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Living in the Moment
What do you want to do with the rest of your life? With your future stretching far
into the distance, you probably have plenty of ideas. But suppose you didn’t
have so much time? How would your priorities change? How would you make
the most of the time you have left? These are questions that those in late
adulthood have to consider.
Current Research in Psychology
• The theory of socioemotional selectivity holds that our perception of time plays an important role in the types of goals we set.
• Young adults tend to set long-term goals. Older adults tend to set short-term goals. They also begin to restrict their social network.
• Older adults become better at controlling their emotions, especially negative ones.
• Many older adults want to live in the moment.
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Thinking Critically• How might the fact that older adults’ emotions seem to
“mellow with age” enhance their well-being?
• Think about a situation when your time with friends was limited. What were your main goals during this period?
Adulthood
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Death and Dying
• A much criticized theory states that the stages of dying include denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.
• Dying people need support, relief from pain, and a dignified end.
• Funerals help the living celebrate the life of the deceased and cope with sadness.
Section 4 at a Glance
Adulthood
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Reading Focus• What are the stages of dying?
• How can people help a loved one die with dignity?
• How do people deal with death?
Main Idea
People deserve to die with dignity and the support of those who love them. After someone dies, the living often depend on religious beliefs and traditional customs to cope with their sadness.
Death and Dying
Adulthood
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What message would you leave behind?
Adulthood
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• Psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross theorized there are five stages through which many dying people pass. The stages are
– Denial
– Anger
– Bargaining
– Depression
– Acceptance
• Kübler-Ross’s theory has met with considerable criticism.
• Psychologist Edwin Shneidman has not found that feelings about dying follow a particular sequence.
• Another problem is that the theory may tempt people to ignore the uniqueness of each individual’s experiences at the end of life.
Stages of Dying
Adulthood
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Answer: It is falsely sequential and ignores the uniqueness of each individual’s experiences at the end of life.
Analyze
Why has Kübler-Ross’s theory been criticized?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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• Dying people need to feel cared for and supported. They may also need relief from pain.
• Dying people need security, self-confidence, and dignity.
Euthanasia
• Euthanasia is illegal in most states.
• Many people support making it legal with clear restrictions. Others argue that no one has the right to take a life, even one’s own.
The Hospice Alternative
• Some dying people enter a hospice, a homelike place where dying people and their families receive physical and emotional support to help them cope with terminal illness.
The Living Will
• Many people write living wills, which are legal documents in which a person requests to be allowed to die rather than be kept alive by artificial means if disabled beyond a reasonable expectation of recovery.
Dying with Dignity
Adulthood
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Answer: by understanding the extent of the dying person’s need for details and information, by respecting the dying person as an individual with the right to know what to expect
Summarize
How can people help a dying person achieve a sense of peace?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Bereavement• People who are bereaved are mourning over the person they have
lost.
• Bereaved people may feel sadness, loneliness, anger, numbness, and even relief. Most bereaved people eventually recover from their loss.
The Funeral• The funeral is a traditional way to acknowledge that a member of the
community has died.
• Funerals reflect religious beliefs and cultural practices.
• Funerals are a way of saying good-bye to the deceased.
• They provide a way to remember and celebrate the life of the deceased.
Dealing with Death
Adulthood
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Answer: to acknowledge that a family member or friend has died
Identify Supporting Details
What is the purpose of a funeral?
Reading Check
Adulthood
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Cultural Perspectives on Grief and Death
People everywhere grieve when a loved one dies. However, the form that their
grief takes and the rituals people observe in the face of death vary from culture
to culture. To a great extent, our culture shapes us and the way we look at the
world. The way we express grief and respond to death is no less a product of
culture.
Cultural Diversity and Psychology
• Mexicans celebrate the Day of the Dead every November.
• According to some traditional African religions, the dead are believed to continue their existence in a spirit world where they have the power to help or harm the living.
• Chinese funeral customs involve lengthy services that can last up to 49 days.
• Traditional Jewish funerals include a simple burial ceremony, followed by a seven-day period of mourning called Shivah.
Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Adulthood
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Thinking Critically• What similar attitude toward the dead do all of these
cultural traditions reveal?
• What different funeral traditions have you heard about?
Adulthood
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Experiencing the Stages of Adulthood
What would you like to say to your future self? How might you see
yourself looking back as an older adult?
• In this simulation, you will write two letters to yourself—one addressed to yourself in late adulthood and the other written from the point of view of your older self.
• The simulation will help you think about what the stages of adulthood might hold for you.
1. Introduction
Simulation: Applying What You’ve Learned
• Work with your group to discuss what you have learned about the stages of adulthood.
• Generate ideas about what life might be like for you in young adulthood, middle adulthood, and late adulthood.
2. Generate Ideas
Adulthood
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• Write the two letters on your own.
• Remember that in the first letter you are writing to yourself 50 years in the future.
• The second letter should be a response to the first letter, written from the point of view of yourself as an older adult.
3. Write the Letters
Simulation (con’t.)
• Take turns reading the letters aloud and discussing them.
• Read the three quotations about aging on the next slide.
• Are your attitudes about aging different after completing this simulation?
• Do the younger and older versions of yourself agree or disagree with the quotations?
4. Share and Discuss the Letters
Adulthood
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