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Jonathan Rauch
The Happiness Curve
Why Life Gets Better After Midlife
2019. 256 S. 198 x 129 mm
Verlag/Jahr: BLOOMSBURY TRADE; GREEN TREE 2019
ISBN: 1-472-96097-1 (1472960971)
Neue ISBN: 978-1-472-96097-9 (9781472960979)
Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken
This book will change your life by showing you how life changes. Why does happiness get harder in your 40s? Why do you feel in a slump even when you´re successful? Where does this malaise come from? And, most importantly, will it ever end?
Drawing on cutting-edge research, award-winning journalist Jonathan Rauch answers all these questions. He shows that from our 20s into our 40s, happiness follows a well-documented U-shaped trajectory, a "happiness curve", declining from the optimism of youth into what´s often a long, low trough in middle age, before starting to rise again in our 50s. This isn´t a midlife crisis, though. Rauch reveals that this downturn is instead a natural stage of life - and an essential one. By shifting priorities away from competition and toward compassion, you can equip yourself with new tools of wisdom and gratitude to head positively into your later years. And Rauch can testify to this personally - it was his own slump, despite acclaim as a journalist and commentator that compelled him to investigate the happiness curve. His own story and the stories of many others from all walks of life - from a steelworker and a limo driver to a telecoms executive and a philanthropist - show how the ordeal of midlife malaise can reboot our values and even our brains for a rebirth of gratitude. Full of insights and eye-opening data, and featuring practical ways to endure the dip and avoid its perils and traps, The Happiness Curve doesn´t just show you the dark forest of midlife, it helps you find a path through the trees.
JONATHAN RAUCH is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a contributing editor of The Atlantic. He has also written for The New Republic, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post, among many other publications. He lives with his husband in Washington, DC.