Being single beats being married.


‘Increasing numbers of people are single because they want to be’

Being single allows people to “live their best, most authentic and most meaningful life” and the idea of wedded bliss is largely a myth, a psychologist has claimed.

Professor Bella DePaulo told the American Psychological Association’s annual convention in Denver that she wanted to challenge the “conventional wisdom” that getting married helped people live longer, happier and healthier lives.

She said she had looked at more than 800 different academic studies carried out over the last 30 years that mentioned single people.

marriage-elderly.jpeg

“The available findings are telling. For example, research comparing people who have stayed single with those who have stayed married shows that single people have a heightened sense of self-determination and they are more likely to experience ‘a sense of continued growth and development’ as a person,” said Professor DePaulo, of the University of California, Santa Barbara.

“Other research shows that single people value meaningful work more than married people do … another study of lifelong single people showed that self-sufficiency serves them well: the more self-sufficient they were, the less likely they were to experience negative emotions. For married people, just the opposite was true.”

There are 16.2 million single people in the UK, compared to 23.7 million married ones, according to Office for National Statistics figures for last year. In 2002, there were about 12.5 million single people and just over 23 million married ones.

Professor DePaulo, who described herself as “single, always have been, always will be”, said the reasons behind the relative popularity of unmarried life were “rarely acknowledged”.

“Increasing numbers of people are single because they want to be. Living single allows them to live their best, most authentic, and most meaningful life,” she said.

 “Single people are more connected to parents, siblings, friends, neighbours, and coworkers than married people are, and when people marry, they become more insular.

“The preoccupation with the perils of loneliness can obscure the profound benefits of solitude.

“It is time for a more accurate portrayal of single people and single life – one that recognizes the real strengths and resilience of people who are single, and what makes their lives so meaningful.”

Professor DePaulo said married people were bolstered by the “relentless celebration of marriage and coupling and weddings that I call matrimania”.

“Single people, in contrast, are targets of singlism – the stereotyping, stigmatizing, marginalizing and discrimination against people who are single,” she said.

But academic studies did not support the prevailing idea of “get married, get happier and healthier”.

“People end up about where they were when they were single. In other ways, results are exactly the opposite of what we have been led to believe,” Professor DePaulo said.

“Scholars are learning more about the risks of putting too much relationship capital into The One, and the psychological benefits of investing in The Ones.

“They are also beginning to realize that genuine attachment relationships are not limited to romantic relationships or the bond between parents and young children.”

Being Single And Happy.


Long Story Short

The stereotype of the lonely singleton is over. A new study has shown thatbeing single and happy is just a matter of whether or not you’re anxious of conflicts with other people.

Fine Living: Being Single And Happy


Long Story

Single people often joke that they’re happy to be free of the drama, arguments and passive aggressiveness that comes with relationships.

Smug couples assume that this is just the cover-up single people use when what they really mean is: “Having to always make my own cups of tea and waking up spooning my duvet every morning is making me genuinely fear that I’ll die alone”.

There have been endless studies telling us that couples are happier than singles. But now, single people officially have permission to be the smug ones, because research gathered from over 4,000 New Zealanders hasfinally proven otherwise.

“It’s a well-documented finding that single people tend to be less happy compared to those in a relationship, but that may not be true for everyone,” said the study’s lead researcher Yuthika Girme.

The study found that people with high “avoidance social goals” – in other words, people who hate conflict and confrontation and try to avoid it all costs – were just as happy being single as other participants who were in a relationship and the frequent battles that come with that.

According to the study, published by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, this could be because being single could remove some the anxiety people with these high avoidance social goals experience whenarguing with their other half.

But before you go and cancel that date and throw out your razor: it’s not all good news for singletons, unfortunately. The single people who took part in the study that weren’t bothered at all about conflict reported to be less happier than their coupled-up counterparts.

So the lesson we can draw from this is that if you’re not bothered about blazing rows over who last took the bin out, you’re happier in a relationship. If you’d rather scratch out your own eyes than ask your girlfriend to move over onto her side of the bed – keep the bed to yourself.


Own The Conversation

Ask The Big Question: What about people who have a chronic fear of sharing food? Are they happier alone, too?

Disrupt Your Feed: The desire to avoid an argument at all costs is engrained in the British way of life. Does this mean most of us are happier single?

Drop This Fact: The most common cause for arguments among couples is money.