1 00:00:00,974 --> 00:00:03,969 What keeps us healthy and happy 2 00:00:03,969 --> 00:00:06,569 as we go through life? 3 00:00:06,569 --> 00:00:08,938 If you were going to invest now 4 00:00:08,938 --> 00:00:11,213 in your future best self, 5 00:00:11,213 --> 00:00:15,323 where would you put your time and your energy? 6 00:00:15,323 --> 00:00:17,575 There was a recent survey of millennials 7 00:00:17,575 --> 00:00:22,683 asking them what their most important life goals were, 8 00:00:22,683 --> 00:00:29,115 and over 80 percent said that a major life goal for them was to get rich, 9 00:00:29,115 --> 00:00:33,503 and another 50 percent of those same young adults 10 00:00:33,503 --> 00:00:35,895 said that another major life goal 11 00:00:35,895 --> 00:00:38,031 was to become famous. 12 00:00:39,308 --> 00:00:40,562 (Laughter) 13 00:00:40,562 --> 00:00:46,506 And we're constantly told to lean in to work, to push harder 14 00:00:46,506 --> 00:00:49,014 and achieve more. 15 00:00:49,014 --> 00:00:52,566 We're given the impression that these are the things that we need to go after 16 00:00:52,566 --> 00:00:54,656 in order to have a good life. 17 00:00:54,656 --> 00:00:56,955 Pictures of entire lives, 18 00:00:56,955 --> 00:01:02,109 of the choices that people make and how those choices work out for them, 19 00:01:02,109 --> 00:01:05,639 those pictures are almost impossible to get. 20 00:01:05,639 --> 00:01:09,145 Most of what we know about human life 21 00:01:09,145 --> 00:01:12,511 we know from asking people to remember the past, 22 00:01:12,511 --> 00:01:17,596 and as we know, hindsight is anything but 20/20. 23 00:01:17,596 --> 00:01:21,172 We forget vast amounts of what happens to us in life, 24 00:01:21,172 --> 00:01:24,934 and sometimes memory is downright creative. 25 00:01:24,934 --> 00:01:32,224 But what if we could watch entire lives as they unfold through time? 26 00:01:32,224 --> 00:01:36,148 What if we could study people from the time that they were teenagers 27 00:01:36,148 --> 00:01:38,586 all the way into old age 28 00:01:38,586 --> 00:01:43,462 to see what really keeps people happy and healthy? 29 00:01:43,462 --> 00:01:45,761 We did that. 30 00:01:45,761 --> 00:01:48,408 The Harvard Study of Adult Development may be the longest study 31 00:01:48,408 --> 00:01:53,841 of adult life that's ever been done. 32 00:01:53,841 --> 00:01:56,140 For 75 years, we've tracked the lives of 724 men, 33 00:01:56,140 --> 00:02:05,892 year after year, asking about their work, their home lives, their health, 34 00:02:05,892 --> 00:02:10,280 and of course asking all along the way without knowing how their life stories 35 00:02:10,280 --> 00:02:13,322 were going to turn out. 36 00:02:13,322 --> 00:02:17,130 Studies like this are exceedingly rare. 37 00:02:17,130 --> 00:02:20,891 Almost all projects of this kind fall apart within a decade, 38 00:02:20,891 --> 00:02:24,188 because too many people drop out of the study, 39 00:02:24,188 --> 00:02:27,346 or funding for the research dries up, 40 00:02:27,346 --> 00:02:29,691 or the researchers get distracted, 41 00:02:29,691 --> 00:02:34,335 or they die, and nobody moves the ball further down the field. 42 00:02:34,335 --> 00:02:37,563 But through a combination of luck and the persistence 43 00:02:37,563 --> 00:02:42,694 of several generations of researchers, this study has survived. 44 00:02:42,694 --> 00:02:46,943 About 60 of our original 724 men 45 00:02:46,943 --> 00:02:48,568 are still alive, 46 00:02:48,568 --> 00:02:50,658 still participating in the study, 47 00:02:50,658 --> 00:02:53,003 most of them in their 90s. 48 00:02:53,003 --> 00:02:55,627 And we are now beginning to study 49 00:02:55,627 --> 00:02:59,946 the more than 2,000 children of these men. 50 00:02:59,946 --> 00:03:03,452 And I'm the fourth director of the study. 51 00:03:03,452 --> 00:03:08,235 Since 1938, we've tracked the lives of two groups of men. 52 00:03:08,235 --> 00:03:10,325 The first group started in the study 53 00:03:10,325 --> 00:03:13,273 when they were sophomores at Harvard College. 54 00:03:13,273 --> 00:03:15,897 They all finished college during World War II, 55 00:03:15,897 --> 00:03:19,450 and then most went off to serve in the war. 56 00:03:19,450 --> 00:03:21,586 And the second group that we've followed 57 00:03:21,586 --> 00:03:25,742 was a group of boys from Boston's poorest neighborhoods, 58 00:03:25,742 --> 00:03:29,411 boys who were chosen for the study specifically because they were from 59 00:03:29,411 --> 00:03:32,801 some of the most troubled and disadvantaged families 60 00:03:32,801 --> 00:03:35,935 in the Boston of the 1930s. 61 00:03:35,935 --> 00:03:41,415 Most lived in tenements, many without hot and cold running water. 62 00:03:41,415 --> 00:03:44,503 When they entered the study, 63 00:03:44,503 --> 00:03:47,661 all of these teenagers were interviewed. 64 00:03:47,661 --> 00:03:49,843 They were given medical exams. 65 00:03:49,843 --> 00:03:53,187 We went to their homes and we interviewed their parents. 66 00:03:53,187 --> 00:03:55,880 And then these teenagers grew up into adults 67 00:03:55,880 --> 00:03:58,109 who entered all walks of life. 68 00:03:58,109 --> 00:04:04,402 They became factory workers and lawyers and bricklayers and doctors, 69 00:04:04,402 --> 00:04:07,559 one President of the United States. 70 00:04:07,559 --> 00:04:13,202 Some developed alcoholism. A few developed schizophrenia. 71 00:04:13,202 --> 00:04:19,030 Some climbed the social from the bottom all the way to the very top, 72 00:04:19,030 --> 00:04:23,511 and some made that journey in the opposite direction. 73 00:04:23,511 --> 00:04:26,460 The founders of this study 74 00:04:26,460 --> 00:04:29,316 would never in their wildest dreams 75 00:04:29,316 --> 00:04:33,356 have imagined that I would be standing here today, 75 years later, 76 00:04:33,356 --> 00:04:37,535 telling you that the study still continues. 77 00:04:37,535 --> 00:04:41,148 Every two years, our patient and dedicated research staff 78 00:04:41,148 --> 00:04:44,167 calls up our men and asks them if we can send them 79 00:04:44,167 --> 00:04:48,300 yet one more set of questions about their lives. 80 00:04:48,300 --> 00:04:51,388 Many of the inner city Boston men ask us, 81 00:04:51,388 --> 00:04:56,751 "Why do you keep wanting to study me? My life just isn't that interesting." 82 00:04:56,751 --> 00:04:59,259 The Harvard men never ask that question. 83 00:04:59,259 --> 00:05:04,181 (Laughter) 84 00:05:07,618 --> 00:05:11,728 To get the clearest picture of these lives, 85 00:05:11,728 --> 00:05:14,839 we don't just send them questionnaires. 86 00:05:14,839 --> 00:05:17,556 We interview them in their living rooms. 87 00:05:17,556 --> 00:05:20,435 We get their medical records from their doctors. 88 00:05:20,435 --> 00:05:22,896 We draw their blood, we scan their brains, 89 00:05:22,896 --> 00:05:24,707 we talk to their children. 90 00:05:24,707 --> 00:05:29,978 We videotape them talking with their wives about their deepest concerns. 91 00:05:29,978 --> 00:05:33,553 And when, about a decade ago, we finally asked the wives 92 00:05:33,553 --> 00:05:35,806 if they would join us as members of the study, 93 00:05:35,806 --> 00:05:38,940 many of the women said, "You know, it's about time." 94 00:05:38,940 --> 00:05:41,448 So what have we learned? 95 00:05:41,448 --> 00:05:46,556 What are the lessons that come from the tens of thousands of pages 96 00:05:46,556 --> 00:05:48,832 of information that we've generated 97 00:05:48,832 --> 00:05:51,962 on these lives? 98 00:05:51,962 --> 00:05:58,602 Well, the lessons aren't about wealth or fame or working harder and harder. 99 00:05:58,602 --> 00:06:04,848 The clearest message that we get from this 75-year study is this: 100 00:06:04,848 --> 00:06:11,187 good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Period. 101 00:06:11,187 --> 00:06:14,856 We've learned three big lessons about relationships. 102 00:06:14,856 --> 00:06:19,197 The first is that social connections are really good for us, 103 00:06:19,197 --> 00:06:21,821 and that loneliness kills. 104 00:06:21,821 --> 00:06:25,178 It turns out that people who are more socially connected 105 00:06:25,178 --> 00:06:28,498 to family, to friends, to community, 106 00:06:28,498 --> 00:06:32,980 are happier, they're physically healthier, and they live longer 107 00:06:32,980 --> 00:06:36,602 than people who are less well-connected. 108 00:06:36,602 --> 00:06:39,945 And the experience of loneliness turns out to be toxic. 109 00:06:39,945 --> 00:06:44,334 People who are more isolated than they want to be from others 110 00:06:44,334 --> 00:06:48,095 find that they are less happy, 111 00:06:48,095 --> 00:06:51,439 their health declines earlier in midlife, 112 00:06:51,439 --> 00:06:53,691 their brain functioning declines sooner, 113 00:06:53,691 --> 00:06:58,103 and they live shorter lives than people who are not lonely. 114 00:06:58,103 --> 00:07:01,562 And the sad fact is that at any given time, 115 00:07:01,562 --> 00:07:07,019 more than one in five Americans will report that they're lonely. 116 00:07:07,019 --> 00:07:10,014 And we know that you can be lonely in a crowd 117 00:07:10,014 --> 00:07:12,652 and you can be lonely in a marriage, 118 00:07:12,652 --> 00:07:14,742 so the second big lessons that we learned 119 00:07:14,742 --> 00:07:17,435 is that it's not just the number of friends you have, 120 00:07:17,435 --> 00:07:21,173 and it's not whether or not you're in a committed relationship, 121 00:07:21,173 --> 00:07:26,815 but it's the quality of your close relationships that matters. 122 00:07:26,815 --> 00:07:31,599 It turns out that living in the midst of conflict is really bad for our health. 123 00:07:31,599 --> 00:07:35,569 High-conflict marriages, for example, without much affection, 124 00:07:35,569 --> 00:07:41,281 turn out to be very bad for our health, perhaps worse than getting divorced. 125 00:07:41,281 --> 00:07:46,203 And living in the midst of good, warm relationships is protective. 126 00:07:46,203 --> 00:07:49,384 Once we had followed our men all the way into their 80s, 127 00:07:49,384 --> 00:07:52,380 we wanted to look back at them at midlife 128 00:07:52,380 --> 00:07:54,980 and to see if we could predict who was going to grow 129 00:07:54,980 --> 00:07:57,465 into a happy, healthy octogenarian 130 00:07:57,465 --> 00:07:59,677 and who wasn't. 131 00:07:59,677 --> 00:08:03,786 And when we gathered together everything we knew about them 132 00:08:03,786 --> 00:08:05,830 at age 50, 133 00:08:05,830 --> 00:08:09,382 it wasn't their middle age cholesterol levels that predicted 134 00:08:09,382 --> 00:08:11,797 how they were going to grow old. 135 00:08:11,797 --> 00:08:15,187 It was how satisfied they were in their relationships. 136 00:08:15,187 --> 00:08:19,947 The people who were the most satisfied in their relationships at age 50 137 00:08:19,947 --> 00:08:23,615 were the healthiest at age 80. 138 00:08:23,615 --> 00:08:26,889 And good, close relationships seem to buffer us 139 00:08:26,889 --> 00:08:30,628 from some of the slings and arrows of getting old. 140 00:08:30,628 --> 00:08:34,134 Our most happily partnered men and women 141 00:08:34,134 --> 00:08:36,827 reported, in their 80s, 142 00:08:36,827 --> 00:08:39,683 that on the days when they had more physical pain, 143 00:08:39,683 --> 00:08:42,469 their mood stayed just as happy. 144 00:08:42,469 --> 00:08:45,673 But the people who were in unhappy relationships, 145 00:08:45,673 --> 00:08:48,831 on the days when they reported more physical pain, 146 00:08:48,831 --> 00:08:52,593 it was magnified by more emotional pain. 147 00:08:52,593 --> 00:08:56,981 And the third big lesson that we learned about relationships and our health 148 00:08:56,981 --> 00:09:00,046 is that good relationships don't just protect our bodies, 149 00:09:00,046 --> 00:09:02,205 they protect our brains. 150 00:09:02,205 --> 00:09:06,849 It turns out that being in a securely attached relationship 151 00:09:06,849 --> 00:09:11,122 to another person in your 80s is protective, 152 00:09:11,122 --> 00:09:14,279 that the people who are in relationships where they really feel 153 00:09:14,279 --> 00:09:17,205 they can count on the other person in times of need, 154 00:09:17,205 --> 00:09:21,152 those people's memories stay sharper longer. 155 00:09:21,152 --> 00:09:23,079 And the people in relationships where they feel 156 00:09:23,079 --> 00:09:25,517 they really can't count on the other one, 157 00:09:25,517 --> 00:09:30,788 those are the people who experience earlier memory decline. 158 00:09:30,788 --> 00:09:34,178 And those good relationships, they don't have to be smooth all the time. 159 00:09:34,178 --> 00:09:37,916 Some of our octogenarian couples could bicker with each other 160 00:09:37,916 --> 00:09:39,611 day in and day out, 161 00:09:39,611 --> 00:09:42,908 but as long as they felt that they could really count on the other 162 00:09:42,908 --> 00:09:44,418 when the going got tough, 163 00:09:44,418 --> 00:09:49,619 those arguments didn't take a toll on their memories. 164 00:09:49,619 --> 00:09:52,358 So this message, 165 00:09:52,358 --> 00:09:57,861 that good, close relationships are good for our health and well being, 166 00:09:57,861 --> 00:10:01,391 this is wisdom that's as old as the hills. 167 00:10:01,391 --> 00:10:05,431 Why is this so hard to get and so easy to ignore? 168 00:10:05,431 --> 00:10:07,358 Well, we're human. 169 00:10:07,358 --> 00:10:10,075 What we'd really like is a quick fix, 170 00:10:10,075 --> 00:10:11,793 something we can get 171 00:10:11,793 --> 00:10:15,577 that'll make our lives good and keep them that way. 172 00:10:15,577 --> 00:10:18,898 Relationships are messy and they're complicated 173 00:10:18,898 --> 00:10:22,752 and the hard work of tending to family and friends, 174 00:10:22,752 --> 00:10:25,399 it's not sexy or glamorous. 175 00:10:25,399 --> 00:10:28,696 It's also lifelong. It never ends. 176 00:10:28,696 --> 00:10:33,758 The people in our 75-year study who are the happiest in retirement 177 00:10:33,758 --> 00:10:39,447 were the people who had actively worked to replace workmates with new playmates. 178 00:10:39,447 --> 00:10:42,674 Just like the millennials in that recent survey, 179 00:10:42,674 --> 00:10:46,110 many of our men when they were starting out as young adults 180 00:10:46,110 --> 00:10:50,824 really believed that fame and wealth and high achievement 181 00:10:50,824 --> 00:10:54,353 were what they needed to go after to have a good life, 182 00:10:54,353 --> 00:10:57,047 but over and over over these 75 years, our study has shown 183 00:10:57,047 --> 00:11:04,012 that the people who fared the best were the people who leaned in to relationships, 184 00:11:04,012 --> 00:11:08,285 with family, with friends, with community. 185 00:11:08,285 --> 00:11:11,419 So what about you? 186 00:11:11,419 --> 00:11:14,995 Let's say you're 25, or you're 40, or you're 60. 187 00:11:14,995 --> 00:11:19,592 What might leaning in to relationships even look like? 188 00:11:19,592 --> 00:11:23,865 Well, the possibilities are practically endless. 189 00:11:23,865 --> 00:11:26,303 It might be something as simple 190 00:11:26,303 --> 00:11:29,716 as replacing screen time with people time 191 00:11:29,716 --> 00:11:34,499 or livening up a stale relationship by doing something new together, 192 00:11:34,499 --> 00:11:37,053 long walks or date nights, 193 00:11:37,053 --> 00:11:42,370 or reaching out to that family member who you haven't spoken to in years, 194 00:11:42,370 --> 00:11:46,015 because those all-too-common family feuds 195 00:11:46,015 --> 00:11:48,244 take a terrible toll 196 00:11:48,244 --> 00:11:51,681 on the people who hold the grudges. 197 00:11:51,681 --> 00:11:57,323 I'd like to close with a quote from Mark Twain. 198 00:11:57,323 --> 00:11:59,552 More than a century ago, 199 00:11:59,552 --> 00:12:02,222 he was looking back on his life, 200 00:12:02,222 --> 00:12:05,055 and he wrote this: 201 00:12:05,055 --> 00:12:08,747 "There isn't time, so brief is life, 202 00:12:08,747 --> 00:12:14,970 for bickerings, apologies, heartburnings, callings to account. 203 00:12:14,970 --> 00:12:17,709 There is only time for loving, 204 00:12:17,709 --> 00:12:22,980 and but an instant, so to speak, for that." 205 00:12:22,980 --> 00:12:27,415 The good life is built with good relationships. 206 00:12:27,415 --> 00:12:29,853 Thank you. 207 00:12:29,853 --> 00:12:33,847 (Applause)