| Middle-aged and Older Adults More Likely to Forgive | |
ANN ARBOR---Nearly 60 percent of a nationally representative sample of 1,423
Americans report that they have forgiven themselves for past mistakes and
wrong-doing, and nearly three-quarters say they feel they've been forgiven by
God, but only 52 percent say they have forgiven others and just 43 percent say
they have actively sought forgiveness for harm they have done, according to a
study conducted at the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research (ISR),
the world's largest academic survey and research organization.
The study---the first national survey to examine age differences in multiple
dimensions of forgiveness, then link those differences to both mental and
physical health---finds that middle-aged and older adults were more likely to
forgive others than were younger adults. In those aged 45 and older, forgiving
others was linked with better self-reported mental and physical health. "The
benefits of forgiveness seem to increase with age," says Loren Toussaint, a
psychologist who is the first author of the study report published in October in
the Journal of Adult Development.
Older people were also more likely than the young to feel forgiven by God,
although all ages reported experiencing high levels of this type of forgiveness,
a finding that Toussaint says left him "slightly surprised. I think all of us,
at one time or another, when we've made the same mistakes over and over again,
have felt that we must be a disappointment in God's eyes. Yet there's a
remarkably high level of confidence across the country that God forgives us,
compared to a much lower level of forgiveness of oneself and others."
About 80 percent of adults aged 45 and older said they knew that God forgave
them for their sins and that this knowledge gave them the strength to face their
faults and be a better person, compared with 69 percent of those aged 18 to 44.
In comparison, 46 percent of the young, 57 percent of the middle-aged and 62
percent of those aged 65 and older scored high on a series of questions designed
to assess the extent to which they had forgiven others. Among the items in this
index were questions about how often people held on to feelings of resentment
and tried to get even in some way.
"We found a particularly strong relationship between forgiveness of others and
mental health among middle-aged and older Americans," says David R. Williams, a
sociologist and senior research scientist at ISR. People who reported higher
levels of this type of forgiveness were more satisfied with their lives and less
likely to report symptoms of psychological distress, including feeling nervous,
restless or sad.
The researchers also found that women were more forgiving than men, with 54
percent of women scoring high in forgiveness of others compared with 49 percent
of men and 48 percent of women reporting that they had actively sought another's
forgiveness, compared with just 37 percent of men.
But not all types of forgiveness had positive effects, the researchers found.
"High levels of 'proactive forgiveness,' which involves asking forgiveness from
someone you've hurt, asking God to forgive you, or praying to God to forgive
someone who has hurt you, were strongly linked with high levels of psychological
distress," says Toussaint, who is currently affiliated with Idaho State
University. "Furthermore, older adults with high levels of proactive forgiveness
reported less satisfaction with their lives than other older adults. This is
understandable, since asking forgiveness can be stressful. It involves admitting
to yourself that you've done something really wrong. Also, you risk rejection
from the other person."
To elucidate why certain forms of forgiveness are positively related to health,
Toussaint and Williams plan to examine the extent to which forgiveness is
important in dealing with the anger and trauma following Sept. 11. "I suspect
that forgiveness may prove to be a sort of psychological antidote to anger,
which has already been shown to have a host of negative physical and mental
health effects," says Toussaint.
Funding for the current study was provided by the Fetzer Institute as part of
the John Templeton Foundation campaign for forgiveness research, the National
Institute of Mental Health, and the U-M Office of the Vice President for
Research.
Collaborators included sociologist Marc A. Musick, now at the University of
Texas at Austin, and epidemiologist Susan A. Everson, now at Rush Presbyterian
St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago.
Established in 1948, the Institute for Social Research (ISR) is among the
world's oldest survey research organizations, and a world leader in the
development and application of social science methodology. ISR conducts some of
the most widely-cited studies in the nation, including the Survey of Consumer
Attitudes, the National Election Studies, the Monitoring the Future Study, the
Panel Study of Income Dynamics, the Health and Retirement Study, the Columbia
County Longitudinal Study, and the National Survey of Black Americans. ISR
researchers also collaborate with social scientists in more than 60 nations on
the World Values Surveys and other projects, and the Institute has established
formal ties with universities in Poland, China, and South Africa. Visit the ISR
Web site at www.isr.umich.edu for more information.
Percentage of U.S. adults who report high levels of four types of forgiveness
Ages 18-44 Ages 45-64 Ages 65 +
Forgiveness of self 53 62 59
Forgiveness of others 46 57 62
Forgiveness by God 69 80 79
Proactive Forgiveness 40 47 47
Percentage of U.S men and women reporting high levels of forgiveness
Men Women
Forgiveness of self 56 57
Forgiveness of others 49 54
Forgiveness by God 71 77
Proactive Forgiveness 37 48
Source: University of Michigan Institute for Social Research 2001
---University of Michigan
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