I remember hearing my school years described as “the best of my life” by adults as a teen and thinking, “surely not”. Since then, my doubts have proven warranted: I reckon my life’s gotten better every year since about 22.
A new paper, which asked older European adults to list the best years of their life, supports that further.
Looking at data from adults aged 50+ across 13 countries, the researchers found that after reflecting on their lives, participants said their “subjective well-being” (SWB) peaked at 30-34.
This is an “inverted U-shaped” trend
This is not the only research of its kind to find similar results. A 2021 American poll asked older people which age they’d most like to stay at – and 36 won out.
That, the European paper suggests, goes against previous “U-shaped” theories of happiness across age. Some studies state that SWB is high in adulthood, stays roughly level throughout adulthood, and peaks again in older age (some research says this falls sharply after 75).
But this paper, which the author says is “novel” in asking people “the period individuals recall as the happiest in their lives,” found more of an “inverted U-shape”, or “concave”, trend.
It showed a “crest of happiness” from 30-34, which built up from childhood and tapered away as individuals aged.
Very few respondents said that childhood was the happiest period of their lives, even when their childhoods were relatively peaceful.