What Wise Women Want in a Relationship with a Man

Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939) was puzzled by the women of his time. We shouldn’t be. They have a wisdom worthy of admiration.

The psychoanalyst once said to the esteemed Marie Bonaparte:

“The great question that has never been answered, and which I have not yet been able to answer, despite my thirty years of research into the feminine soul, is ‘What does a woman want?‘”**

I will dare to answer the question the legendary psychiatrist could not. I received no small guidance from several knowing, kind, and whip-smart women I consulted on this issue. During my practice, I also evaluated or treated approximately 2000 individuals of the same gender.

First, I have narrowed the topic and will only offer a bit about young women. Like the men of their age, the experience, time, and change required to fully know themselves is ahead of them.

No one can understand what it will be like to marry, divorce, raise children to maturity, compete in the job market, suffer an illness, or grow older until many sunsets pass.

In the hormonal flow of youth, one is more prone to being swept away by a smile, charm, or an impressive resume. With luck, they have not yet been subject to the weight of longstanding desperation.

Time, disappointment, a broken heart, and mistreatment inform the wise about what they don’t want and what might create an enduring, loving partnership. Though we never fully understand ourselves, the clear-sighted and self-reflective among us acquire more self-knowledge than the younger version of ourselves.

Here, then, is a list of 18 characteristics that many astute, mature women are looking for in a partner:

1. To be Seen: A woman wants a consort to display interest in her. If the fellow is psychologically minded, such an enlightened companion will explore her ideas and soul as his acquaintance grows. Many women offer a sense of mystery and past adventures that go unmentioned unless a trusted one searches for them.

Significant others want to be recognized for who they are—never taken for granted. There are hopes, fears, passions, disappointments, and dreams to be uncovered. One extraordinary woman told me a lover should “look up when she enters the room.”

2. Kindness.

3. To be Admired: Routine wears down the niceties and compliments that draw us together. The words, flowers, candies, greeting cards, opened doors, and handwritten notes often become less frequent or vanish.

While it is impossible to make every day fresh, we all need admiration. With that comes respect and the acknowledgment that the other is your equal. She wants to be treated so.

4. Applause of Her Strengths and Acceptance of Her Weaknesses.

5. Financial Security: Women who earn more than sufficient funds sometimes fear a partner’s financial dependency or resentment of her success. Conversely, a male who controls the family finances because it is “his money” diminishes the one he says he loves and who he entrusts with their children.

To the extent the lady has set aside her career in whole or in part, appreciation should be factored into the twosome’s wealth.

6. Good Grooming: This quality includes caring for the body as it ages and regular medical checkups rather than avoiding MDs. Shaving regularly and showering after exercise show respect.

Not less than males, females want to be proud of how a mate appears in public. A man’s behavior needs to inform the woman she is desired. Attire and grooming tell her a part of this without words.

7. To be Heard: The partner should listen with intensity and focus, not impatience or overtalking. No one desires dismissal by someone checking the phone, looking at his watch, keeping the TV on, or reading.

Being heard requires patience, supportive listening, and understanding. It does not include unrequested solutions.

Men are inclined to dismiss emotions rather than provide comfort and recognition of the importance of the range of human feelings. One of the ladies I consulted reminded me that intimacy follows from being understood and heard.

8. Romance.

9. Sense of Humor: Wit, cleverness, and laughter are essential and count for more than many gents realize. A mature adult grasps the comical absurdities of life.

10. Acceptance of Physical Changes. No matter our self-care and exercise, evidence of aging cannot be hidden. The hand of Father Time can be delayed but not escaped. A wise spouse accepts this in himself and his mate.

11. A Mensch: According to Leo Rosten, Yiddish offers a version of “man” that differs from the definition of the same word in German.

A mensch is “someone to admire and emulate, someone of noble character. The key to being a ‘real mensch’ is nothing less than character, rectitude, dignity, a sense of what is right, responsible, decorous.”

Wikipedia adds, “The term is a high compliment, implying the rarity and value of that individual’s qualities.”

12. Honoring a Woman’s Role as a Caregiver and Family CEO: To the degree a man’s partner has historically taken on the traditional role of caregiver, this must be recognized and applauded. It should not be labeled as a set of tasks to be fulfilled by the female alone, expecting she forever put herself last.

Whether raising a child, earning a living, or both, a woman has accomplished something of merit. She requires time for self-care and wants a man to demonstrate his care for her through actions and words. She also needs time to herself, friendships, and activities apart from her husband.

13. Trust and a Sense of Safety—Physically, Verbally, and Emotionally.

14. Good Sex. Some couples will acknowledge a changed or fading sexual interest with time. A female confidant spoke for those who maintain much or all of their desire:

“Mature women are often more comfortable in their bodies, know what they like, have experience, and needn’t worry about pregnancy. They want a thoughtful and imaginative lover who cares about her pleasure.”

15. Opportunity and Support if a Woman Pursues a Career.

16. The Willingness to Apologize: The male ego insists that some men take an unashamed and unrepentant stance. Humble apologies are a necessity on both sides of any pair of people. Sincerity and reflection should be combined with humility, the better to escape future harm to someone you love.

17. Try to Show Interest in What Interests Them: It is well known that couples can grow apart over time. Too great a separation in what is vital to the other leads to a dying or dead letter connection between the individuals.

 18. Desiring No Man. Among those mature women who have had relationships and are heterosexual, more than a few find life satisfying without a romantic or sexual relationship with a man or woman.

Some of you will take issue with what I’ve written because I said too much or too little or revealed that I share the psychological blindness of many of my gender. I shall be pleased to be informed of shortcomings. Thank you for reading.

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The first image is A Woman Bathing Her Feet in a Brook by Camille Pissarro, 1894/95, Art Institute of Chicago. It is followed by a Daguerreotype of an Unidentified Woman ca. 1850 by Southworth & Hawes.

The following photo is Colors of a Woman, 2009, by Alex Proimos from Sydney, Australia. Finally, J. Howard Miller’s “We Can Do It!” is also known as “Rosie the Riveter,” after the iconic figure of a strong female war production worker. 1942/43. All the images but the Pissarro work are sourced from Wikimedia Commons.

**Sigmund Freud: Life and Work (Hogarth Press, 1953) by Ernest Jones, Vol. 2, Pt. 3, Ch.

Sign Language

Tuesday is the day the garbage trucks return to my block. To prepare, I have two jobs. 

First, I top off the landfill and recycling containers with the weekly junk. Then, I pull them behind me on their rollers to the end of our long driveway. 

As the Buddha said, “Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water.”

His point is that life goes on either way. I don’t chop wood, but I haul trash bins. The Buddha would be pleased, and so is my wife.

Since the refuse vehicle operator arrives early, most neighbors do this the day before, around dinner time. As you can imagine, I live in an enlightened neighborhood.

Here’s the exciting part of last Monday: When I was halfway into the dragging phase, a beautiful, smiling, graceful 30-year-old woman slowed her pace down the sidewalk I was heading for and spoke to me.

“What’s your sign?”

Back in the day, this was a come-on. 

At a bar or a party, someone would move in your direction because they found you attractive and potentially interesting. Referring to your sign could be a conversation starter.

My ears told me the lady in question referred to signs of the Zodiac, which some believe explain your personality. 

They think your daily horoscope hints at what the future holds. Put another way, it’s like a Chinese fortune cookie prediction.

Well, of course, I am an aging babe magnet, I thought, and put on my biggest grin. The charming woman took one step toward me. I continued my gradual roll in her direction and uttered:

“Capricorn.”

“Oh, I like your your sign!”

She seemed enthusiastic to the max.

“Yes, well, it’s the only one I have.”

At this point, the femme fatale raised two thumbs and smiled again but turned and walked away.

What happened? I was at a loss.

Bummer, I thought to myself. Not Boomer, the derogatory expression some young people use to dismiss anyone my age.

Still functioning, I placed the plastic refuse containers at the curb’s edge and began my brief return to the house.

Looking back at my home and the grass in front of it, I figured the whole thing out.

I need to tell you that I wear hearing aids. Though they cost a fortune, they do not reproduce sound as well as tip-top ears. I am at the mercy of mishearing imprecise words and those at some distance.

Like, maybe the gap between me and the lass.

I am also subject to the clutches of a wishful thought or two.

Ahha!

The charmer wasn’t responding to my studly, hunky, ancient self in the way I thought. She never said, “What’s your sign.” She said, “I like your sign,” twice since she realized I had misheard her first attempt.

What was she talking about?

She referred to the placard I placed on my front lawn almost three months ago.

The poster promotes one of the two leading US presidential candidates. A bit late, I realized that the beauty agreed with my advocacy of one of them.

Harris.

See you at the polls.

You never know who you might meet there.

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The Singapore Safety Sign is the work of Uwe Arana. The sign below it is the Penguins Crossing Funny Road Sign from New Zealand. It was created by MSeses. Both were sourced from Wikimedia Commons

Shrinking Your Problems Down To Size

Important ideas often come in pairs.

For example, Oscar Wilde said, “There are only two tragedies in life: one is not getting what you want, and the other is getting it.”

There is an essential truth in his words beyond his cleverness.

The playwright grasped that failing to achieve a cherished goal can be enormously painful.

On the other hand, reaching a significant aspiration leaves us with a question. Since the joy of a dream come true is rarely permanent, what comes next?

Early and extraordinary accomplishments, in particular, can cause magnificent artists and athletes to strive to surpass their former level of excellence.

In the worst cases, they are forever compared to their earlier self and found wanting.

On a more optimistic note, upsets worth losing sleep over aren’t always what cause us to lose sleep. The encouraging aspect of this is that before long we tend to get over the issues disrupting our rest.

One reason for bedtime disturbance is man’s penchant to overestimate the significance of familiar if not petty, wounds of the everyday. Someone cutting us off while driving is one such unremarkable event unless it ends in a collision.

Given humanity’s inherent vulnerability, to live means to suffer some of the time. Solace can be found if we accept that we can’t escape injury, insult, or slow and talkative shoppers in the queue ahead of us who forever search for the coupons buried in their purses or pockets.

Indeed, the Buddhists would remind us that our fellow customers offer us a chance to learn patience.

Long ago, I discovered that if something troubled me between sunrise and sunset, it helped to trace the timeline back to the moment when my distress arrived. I tried to analyze what caused it and why.

Pinpointing and dealing with the feelings as far before bedtime as possible tended to diminish some of my unhappiness. The monstrosity was reduced to a more tolerable size.

Most of our daily frustrations are minor issues in the grand scheme of things. One might lose a slice of one night’s sleep, but the trouble can be put to bed by the next day.

What is important, then? Freud identified love and work as central to our humanity and cornerstones of well-being. However, the legendary psychoanalyst also believed happiness is a slippery commodity.

Grasping permanent contentment is like catching a feather on a windy day. Freud thought a talented therapist would be able to minimize the unhappiness of the people in treatment, at best.

I might agree with the illustrious analyst that our lives are up and down. All people are subject to many matters they can command and a good-sized sum of those they can’t.

However, I do not believe Freud’s dark view applies at every moment or that the world’s mischief and randomness entirely control us.

Happiness depends on your inborn temperament, your life experience, learning to manage a sliver of the world, making a decent living, friendship, and benefiting from good luck. The individual can influence some of these, allowing reason for hope and openness to joy.

Accepting the road’s imperfections, our starts and stops, and the minor accidents in human relationships is helpful. We can learn to take on only those challenges worthy of our effort and shrug off the smaller disappointments and those from which we can recover.

Not every fight is worth fighting about. Not every bone is worth gnawing.

One more aspect of existence we might contemplate is this: which issues are temporary and which are permanent?

Here is an example. Many describe suicide as a permanent solution to a temporary problem.

If we flip the words, we should consider how often we reach for short-lived solutions that are inadequate to defeat persistent or long-standing concerns. Our short-term fixes can worsen things.

Drugs and alcohol are examples of remedies chosen to reduce the pain of situations we would do well to overhaul instead. The ancient Chinese offered this wisdom: “First, the man takes the drink, then the drink takes the man.”

That’s my story for today. Here’s hoping I’ve given you some ideas to ponder. If not, I won’t lose any sleep over it.

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The 1930 caricature by Carl Josef is of A Psychiatrist with Intense Bulging Eyes. It was sourced from Wikimedia Commons.

Fragile Masculinity: Understanding Angry White Men


Masculinity is a fragile thing.

Where in the Western World is there a fitting place for a man who feels he is not quite a man?

Young men strive to be real men—successful, tough, and admired. Women are expected to recognize them. Their children must respect, honor, and praise them and their ideas rather than ignore or mock them.

We live in a moment when grievance is widespread. A man who doesn’t meet the cultural standard for maleness shies away from publicly feeling sorry for himself. Instead, he blames others, who, he states, have taken his place or gotten an edge that eludes him. The fellow has been displaced from the spot he deserves, or so he believes.

All of the above is consistent with Masculine Discrepancy Stress. Whether conscious or not, when a man falls short of societally expected manliness or his own sense of what he should be, he is ripe for unhappiness and anger. While this syndrome is not yet well-researched, it does fit into our current moment.

Politicians play on this. They identify with such an individual’s sense of unfairness and fuel his rage, maintaining that it is just.

Promises follow. Their anointed defender says he will put things right for this otherwise unseen group of men. Indeed, these politicians recognize the vulnerability of those men who want to be seen and sided with, but without saying so.

He might be your father, brother, uncle, friend, or neighbor. He might go off like a roadside bomb or sit and simmer. He could also be you: a grumpy, irritable, angry old white man or a younger version who diminishes women and “others,” including members of minority groups.

He needn’t be the kind of creature whose head revolves like a searchlight, looking for something or someone to piss him off, the guy who yells, “Get off my lawn!” But he could be.

Endocrinologists point to low testosterone as a possible cause, especially past 60, when some males begin the hormonal decline. I’ll focus on the human rather than the chemical equation: what it feels like to be a disadvantaged white male. Don’t discount the hormonal changes, but research them elsewhere.

Let’s start with what constitutes a young man.

Males pass through a stage of feeling almost invulnerable and immortal, at least on occasion. They rush to fight wars, compete for mates, and try to climb higher than others. Women perform a selection of these tasks, but few teenage girls believe themselves indestructible.

I was neither a great athlete nor the most intelligent person I knew at any point in life. Yet, I know of which I speak. There are moments when many young men believe they can do almost anything.

For some, hubris comes in athletics or academics. The babe-magnets fancy themselves as sex machines.

Kids I knew took pride in intimidation, rocket-like racing, placing first in fierceness, or towering over classmates as regents of recklessness. Even those who broke the rules grew in foolish conceit. Boasts were heard about consuming the most beer in the bar.

This silliness seems built-in, tied to the need of early men to attract females and save their skin from beasts and enemies. Ambition and power fed your chance of spreading your genetic seed, an evolutionary but unconscious imperative. From a survival standpoint, wars wanted winners, and trees needed climbing for their fruit.

Among my youthful acquaintances, I’m sure much of this was already present in the watery womb. But I am not talking about angry kids; instead, the sense of immortality and competitiveness necessary in youth sets some men up for disappointment when the contemporary world offers few places where a big man can dominate a small pond.

If a man lived through injustices and disappointments early or late, his rage—once bottled up or transformed into ambition—would now go nowhere productive, at least to no meaningful arena for a staged competition.

If he is retired, the battles he fought at work and on the athletic field are foreclosed. You can still be an award-winning bodybuilder at 65, but all the comparisons are with people your age. A real man of the old school knows the difference.

The indignities of aging seem to cause women less trouble or at least less public aggravation. They are better sports and, ironically, superior at manning up to the depredations of time. The suicide rate of old bucks skyrockets. Data from the CDC indicates that in 2022, males committed suicide four times more often than females. While males make up 50% of the population, they account for 80% of suicides.


Unless you are a rare man, you’ve lost a step, an edge, a bit or more of your balance and grace by middle age. The IQ and neuropsychological tests display the results; so does the mirror. Even the beer-drinking boaster takes longer to recover from his hangover.

Some domains are uniquely problematic for the male. My physician tells me there are only two categories concerning an enlarged prostate: those men who have one and those who are going to get one. Nor does the sexual trigger work as dependably. A 55-year-old male former patient proclaimed: “I’m not the man I once was, but once I’m the man I was.”

I could go on to infinity about aches, pains, loss of hair and color, sun damage to the skin, and more frequent urination. The sixty-something male is sexually less relevant (his studly days having passed), evolutionarily irrelevant for the same reason, invisible to almost everyone (including young women), and gets called “sir” much too often for comfort.

The twenty-first century adds to this list: frustration over mastering the exponential growth of technological change, the supreme domain of youth. You are probably sick of reading my catalog of slow decline, so just imagine the poor guys who are living the descent and whose age-related sleep problems give them more time to stew.

Retirement or unsatisfying employment is perhaps the most significant loss and driver of a man’s ire.

Concerning the former, job site friendships tend to fade unless he is extroverted and has nurtured intimacy outside his family. Too many men lack an identity beyond labor. Women suffer labor pains in childbirth, but men suffer them by the absence of meaningful work. By 60, unless you are so grandiose as to run for public office or be a significant CEO, your working future is foreshortened. Perhaps even sooner.

The situation is different (but no less frustrating) if you remain on the career treadmill due to financial necessity or a failure to accomplish long-term goals. Few of us are like Warren Buffett, Picasso, Stravinsky, or Frank Lloyd Wright, producing wonders late in life.

Voltaire said, “Work saves a man from three great evils: boredom, vice, and need.” He is in trouble once his formal working life ends or declines unless the old man possesses enough cash, interests, and friends. A narrow vocational focus sets him up for a painful retirement or unemployment.

Labor provides a sense of worth and accomplishment. A man needs to be useful. A job normalizes and distracts him, keeps depression at bay while dissipating the “fight” in the surly chap we are describing.

There is considerable data linking an early retirement to an earlier death: Retirement kills. A vocation orders any life, providing a timetable and a list of tasks.

Retirement or unemployment can be disorienting and frustrating without the scaffolding that structures perhaps 50 hours or more a week (if we include travel to and from the job). It is only a short step to depression, alcohol abuse, anger, or all three. Think again about the place of vice on Voltaire’s list of “three evils” and remember: one of the “seven deadly sins” is wrath.

Time is a cruel and ironic jester to the angry old white male. The latter is idle during the day and imagines too little of a lifetime ahead. Moreover, the years pass with a psychological rapidity unknown to the young. Three-hundred-sixty-five days still make a year, but somehow, the revolutions around the sun go faster.

The irrelevant elder must either reinvent himself or suffer an internal upset that has eyes: it looks for a target. Neighbors, politicians, friends, relatives, children, young people, and minority groups are the usual suspects.

The partisan broadcast media stirs the political pot and fuels the sense of unfairness. Their incentives, whether a genuine belief in how to right the lopsided world or the lure of big money and influence, spell trouble for those whom they transfix.

Exasperated white men are their white bread and butter, regardless. The bunch admires those running for office who carry the Y chromosome, project masculine authority and toxic certitude, and disparage women. Female candidates need not apply for their approval.

Once king of his castle, he finds his loyal subjects (his children) have their own lives. Perhaps his proud and mighty fortress is both emptier and shabbier over time. Since it is not manly to weep, he rants.

None of this is good for blood pressure or happiness. Nor is the irritable and ancient buck likely to read this or anything else for advice. His anger seems righteous. The problem is perceived to be elsewhere. A spouse hesitates to complain or utter worries about the mental state of a man who resembles Caligula, the insane Roman tyrant.

Still, a family intervention might be needed, with relatives and friends reinforcing each other’s concerns about their kinsman. A trusted physician is another possible source of advice, diagnosis, and treatment of any contributory medical issues.

Therapy or retirement coaching is indicated, but only if you can get this injured soul to submit with an open heart. The odds do not favor a trip to a counselor. Regardless, our subject has a selection of possible tasks to complete for a better life:

  1. Develop hobbies if they are absent.
  2. Join community organizations or volunteer for causes he believes in.
  3. Serving as a mentor to the young can give value to the experience of a little time or a lifetime.
  4. Erect a new structure for his days to keep him focused away from his grievances and on something to give him meaning.
  5. If possible and necessary, get back to work part-time or start a new business.
  6. Learn cognitive-behavioral methods to control rage.
  7. Make new friends or search out old companions, especially if they can make him laugh.
  8. Learn to take the aging process as a less personal affront. Life has not singled anyone out.
  9. Go back to school. Take a free MOOC (massive open online course) like those at Coursera, join a lifelong-learning program (Osher Lifelong Learning), or something like the University of Chicago Basic Program. The latter two examples stimulate learning and face-to-face interaction with same-aged peers who might become new friends.
  10. Limit exposure to the news stories or political pundits whose job is to fan the glowing, incendiary embers inside.
  11. Join a story-telling group. Old men with a gift for performance can deliver some beautiful reminiscences, so they might as well be put to good use with a receptive audience.
  12. Stretch and exercise regularly. Take good care of the body.
  13. Any excavation underneath the anger of an elderly person’s hurt is a dangerous business. Grieving is the work of the young and middle-aged. The old rarely have enough future time or opportunity to redeem the past. Some can handle grieving the failure to achieve early goals and life’s losses, but many can’t. For those carrying too much disappointment, age dictates a more supportive therapy rather than one to search the depths of the soul.
  14. Learn to appreciate what remains.
  15. Consider antidepressant medication.

Lost time, diminished abilities, and the realization of mortality drive a few people mad — mad in both senses of the word.

There is no time to waste. Most men are offered two opportunities for heroism: the risk-taking of a robust youth and a walk into the twilight of life.

Dylan Thomas’s recommendation to “Rage, rage against the dying of the light” (listen to him below) doesn’t serve most of us well.

Twilight can be beautiful or terrifying, depending on luck and attitude. Since we control only one of these, the only realistic choice is to change the latter from terror and anger to gratitude for what we still have, acceptance of what we don’t, and pride in a life well-lived.

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The image of the Angry Man is by Emery Way. It is followed by two dazzling photographs of Laura Hedien: Sunset with Train Tracks, S. Texas, May 2024, and Sunrise in August 2024 in Utah. They are offered with her kind permission: Laura Hedien Official Website.

The first cartoon is Grumpy of the Seven Dwarfs. The second is the Ensign of the 21° Gruppo (Angry Wasp) of the Italian Air Force by F l a n k e r. The Angry Man and the Angry Wasp are sourced from Wikimedia Commons.

Life Is Messy and You Are Not a Vacuum Cleaner: Thinking about Happiness and Change

Change and the need to adjust to change make many of us uneasy. This raises the question of how much happiness depends on stability and the smooth flow of life.

Let’s start our conversation here:

I think you’ll agree we prefer our neighborhoods to remain safe and our savings secure. We hope our friends stay nearby and our loved ones live forever.

Fate has its own plans for better or worse.

Many tend to dismiss the benefits of creative invention. It is easy to forget the summertime fear of polio or that Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States from 1933 to 1945, was one of its victims when he was 39 years old. Today, we are lucky to have antibiotics and polio shots, not to mention COVID and flu vaccinations or the Statin reduction of cardiovascular disease.

People are more inclined to think about troubling alterations to our lives that require us to adapt. Many dread climate change and unpredictable moves requiring work in or out of the office. Closing a favorite store or a terrific restaurant counts as a loss, as does our children’s departure to another state or country.

Social Science researchers have added something to the question of change, happiness, and the effect of life transformations on well-being. It is a list of life events called the Social Readjustment Rating Scale: Updated and Modernized,* a 2022 revision of the original scale developed in 1967 by Holmes and Rahe.**

The scale measures the impact, usually considered stress, various life changes create. Numerical values range from 0 to 100, with marriage assigned a value of 50. The higher the number, the more stress.

For example, according to Holmes and Rahe, the death of a spouse causes the most distress, while something like a parking ticket is at the bottom of the scale.

Think about marriages. Are they not joyous celebrations followed by dream-like honeymoons? Yet, once they begin, they sometimes require uncomfortable adjustments in how you live.

The scale’s creators believed that the more stress-inducing episodes of whatever kind within a year, the more impact they have on well-being and health. They included events that might be welcomed as happy occurrences, like pregnancy, a significant boost in one’s financial status, or an outstanding personal achievement.

Indeed, there is a correlation between stress accumulation and illness. Still, it isn’t sufficiently robust to predict sickness, anxiety, depression, or the extreme versions of such misfortune.

One notable finding in the 2022 study is that life has become more stressful since publication of the first version of the scale in 1967. Many items are rated as more stress-inducing than before—no surprise.

I listed the items on the questionnaire below without identifying the numerical stress values (life change units) assigned to them. Instead, as you think about how challenging change can be, I hope you remember a few things:

Research suggests that humans are built to handle considerable discomfort caused by change. Your 19th-century ancestors almost certainly had a tougher time than you do. Today, most of us in the U.S.A. live better than kings and queens in the days past.

Second, the rating scale implies that to avoid every stress, you must maintain an unchanging existence, avoid all the things you find difficult, give up some of the most attractive goals you are shooting for, and somehow avoid or prevent conditions out of your control.

Doing so would inadvertently eliminate many desirable and wonderous experiences, including those that could give meaning to your life. In other words, no one following this plan would enjoy or benefit from it.

Third, you are likely to face most of the listed stressors over your lifetime. Some will test you, but I suspect, in time, you can find happiness despite them. You will do better if you recognize them as a part of life–of what it means to be human–than as a curse.

Fourth, it is a mistake to assume all the smiling faces around you are without significant problems. No one is joyous at every moment nor shielded from the arrows of living. Their level of resilience or grit should not be deemed less than yours unless you and they have both experienced almost identical misfortune. In any case, such comparisons have little value during a period when you are dealing with high stress or suffering.

The underlying point is that with experience, we can find joy and learning in the game of life—not always, but often. With time, we can gain the confidence to take it on.

Beauty, kindness, fascination, love, friendship, laughter, enlightenment, and wisdom are all available. Accepting that life is messy and you aren’t a vacuum cleaner will help you find them.

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Now for the SOCIAL READJUSTMENT RATING SCALE: UPDATED AND MODERNIZED ITEMS:

To fill out the scale below, you must answer whether or not you experienced the 44 listed events in the last year by signifying yes or no: The first “o” would be checked if you wish to say yes, and the second “o” to respond no.

Life Event:   Yes   No

1. Marriage o o

2. Losing your job (e.g. redundancy, dismissal, etc.) o o

3. Change in religious activities (e.g. a lot more or a lot less than
usual) o o

4. Revision of personal habits (e.g. dress, manners, associations) o o

5. Sexual difficulties o o

6. Trouble with in-laws o o

7. Major change in health or behavior of family member o o

8. Taking on a mortgage or loan for a major purchase (e.g. home, business) o o

9. Taking on a loan for a lesser purchase (e.g. car, furniture) o o

10. Change in eating habits (e.g. a lot more or a lot less food intake, or
very different meal hours or surroundings) o o

11. Pregnancy either yourself or being the father o o

12. Troubles with boss o o

13. Change in financial state (e.g. a lot worse off or a lot better off than
usual) o o

14. Change to a different line of work o o

15. Marital reconciliation o o

16. Change in number of arguments with spouse/life partner (e.g.
either a lot more or a lot less than usual regarding child-rearing,
personal habits, etc.) o o

17. Change in living conditions (e.g. building new home, remodeling,
deterioration of neighborhood or home) o o

18. Outstanding personal achievement o o

19. Retirement o o

20. Business readjustment (e.g. merger, reorganization, bankruptcy) o o

21. Spouse/life partner begins or stops work o o

22. Change in residence o o

23. Change in sleeping habits (e.g. a lot more or a lot less, or change
in part of day when asleep) o o

24. Gain of new family member (e.g. through birth, adoption,
grandparent moving in) o o

25. Change in work hours or conditions o o

26. Son or daughter leaving home (e.g. attend college, marriage) o o

27. Change in responsibilities at work (e.g. promotion, demotion,
lateral transfer) o o

28. Change in social activities (e.g. clubs, dancing, movies, visiting) o o

29. Divorce o o

30. Personal injury or illness o o

31. Death of close family member o o

32. Change in recreation type/amount o o

33. Death of spouse/life partner o o

34. Change in number of family get-togethers (e.g. a lot more or a lot
less than usual) o o

35. Detention in jail or other institution o o

36. Marital separation o o

37. Vacation o o

38. Foreclosure/repossession on mortgage or loan o o

39. Death of close friend o o

40. Changing to a new school o o

41. Begin or end formal schooling o o

42. Christmas o o

43. Minor violations of the law (e.g. traffic/parking tickets) o o

44. Single person, living alone o o

==========

*https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10727443/

**Holmes, T. H., & Rahe, R. H. (1967). The Social Readjustment Rating Scale. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 11(2), 213–218.

The first photo is called Happy Life and is the work of Rasheedhrasheed. It is followed by a photo of Carla Bruni-Sarkozy by Remi Jouan. Finally, Two Blossom-headed Parakeets by Touhid biplob. All of these are sourced from Wikimedia Commons.