Table of Contents
Do you treat your loved ones less kindly than strangers?
We shouldn’t treat our loved ones less kindly than we do strangers. But the reality is that we often do. The suggestions above are just a few strategies to improve your tolerance of your loved ones’ idiosyncrasies, so that, to take one perspective, you can reach the end of your life without feeling regret about how you treated them.
Why do we stop being tolerant of our loved ones?
Rather, it’s that over time, we stop being tolerant of all the things that we have never liked about them. Moreover, pain earns our attention much more than pleasure which gradually causes us to have the least amount of tolerance for the annoying habits, faults, and negative behaviors of our loved ones.
Why is it important to have people around your loved ones?
Further, you’ll have a chance to observe and appreciate the better selves your loved ones have inside them, which are also being pulled out of them by the presence of others. In short, the dynamic between you and your loved ones will change, and generally for the better, when other people are present.
Do relationships with friends and family matter as much as family?
“But the really surprising thing was that, in a lot of ways, relationships with friends had a similar effect as those with family—and in others, they surpassed them.” For the other study, Chopik analyzed a separate survey of nearly 7,500 older people in the U.S.
Do friends and family make you happy?
In the first, involving more than 270,000 people in nearly 100 countries, author William Chopik found that both family and friend relationships were associated with better health and happiness overall. But at advanced ages, the link remained only for people who reported strong friendships.
Are friends more important than family in old age?
Friends become increasingly important to health and happiness as people age, according to new research in the journal Personal Relationships. They’re so crucial, in fact, that having supportive friendships in old age was found to be a stronger predictor of wellbeing than having strong family connections.