Close Menu
Healthtost
  • News
  • Mental Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Skin Care
  • Sexual Health
  • Pregnancy
  • Nutrition
  • Fitness
What's Hot

Prenatal exposure to analgesic opioids not linked to increased risk of autism or ADHD

September 16, 2025

How Hollywood’s obsession with ‘dry appearance’ hurts men and boys

September 16, 2025

Selecting your glow: Facial Oxygen against a microdican Joanna Vargas

September 16, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Healthtost
SUBSCRIBE
  • News

    Prenatal exposure to analgesic opioids not linked to increased risk of autism or ADHD

    September 16, 2025

    Philippines present new technologies for the detection and management of African pigs fever

    September 15, 2025

    Why do more older people die after falls?

    September 15, 2025

    Early B cell response prevents the oropouche virus from reaching the brain

    September 14, 2025

    Smoking increases the risk of all type 2 diabetes subtypes

    September 14, 2025
  • Mental Health

    How to avoid seeing annoying content in social media and protecting your tranquility

    September 16, 2025

    Adding more green space to a campus is a simple, cheap and healthy way to help millions of students with anxiety and depressed college

    September 7, 2025

    Do weigh weighted blankets for stress? Here they show the items

    September 2, 2025

    Pharmaceutical cannabis is most often prescribed for pain, anxiety and sleep. Here they say the items

    August 29, 2025

    How to deal with loss – Talkspace

    August 26, 2025
  • Men’s Health

    How Hollywood’s obsession with ‘dry appearance’ hurts men and boys

    September 16, 2025

    The hidden biology of addiction and cancer

    September 16, 2025

    5 tips to stay healthy and avoid germs – Dr. Ardyce Yik ND

    September 12, 2025

    The best 4 -week training plan for strength and fat loss

    September 11, 2025

    Johns Hopkins team develops urine -based testing for prostate cancer detection

    September 10, 2025
  • Women’s Health

    The story of faith: living with durability

    September 16, 2025

    Right dilaics for hemorrhoids, anal stenosis, slits and pelvic f – vuvatech

    September 14, 2025

    Art and creativity for healing internal wounds

    September 13, 2025

    How to deal with bridal day makeup and hair chaos

    September 13, 2025

    18 photos showing how eczema looks different to everyone

    September 12, 2025
  • Skin Care

    Selecting your glow: Facial Oxygen against a microdican Joanna Vargas

    September 16, 2025

    How to locate eczema activates in school and stop flares

    September 16, 2025

    The complete dual cleaning routine guide: what, why and how

    September 15, 2025

    What skin cells do they really do? And how your routine affects them for skin care

    September 14, 2025

    The best facial cleaners for dry skin

    September 13, 2025
  • Sexual Health

    A short story of online misogyny

    September 14, 2025

    What is causing your low sexual movement?

    September 14, 2025

    What to do when you have a sexually transmitted infection

    September 12, 2025

    How to naturally increase vaginal lubrication: Experts tips to reduce land

    September 12, 2025

    World Sexual Health Day 2025

    September 10, 2025
  • Pregnancy

    How can portable devices convert pregnancy monitoring

    September 16, 2025

    What can your child’s moon phase show you at birth

    September 13, 2025

    EDD PC: accurately identify the best date and conception of your pregnancy

    September 12, 2025

    How Byheart redefines infant formula

    September 11, 2025

    How to do your own baby photography at home

    September 10, 2025
  • Nutrition

    Herbs and Spices: Nature’s immunists

    September 16, 2025

    Priority to sleep for better health

    September 16, 2025

    🍲 Pakistani meals of a container for busy weeks!

    September 15, 2025

    No-bake pb oatmeal chocolate chips

    September 14, 2025

    ‘I will never be able to change’ (lies we say to ourselves)

    September 14, 2025
  • Fitness

    Sleep deprivation and its impact on mental health

    September 16, 2025

    5 Basic Rules for Strengthening Strength and Prevention of Injuries

    September 16, 2025

    How to convert screen time into active time

    September 14, 2025

    3 simple tests to see how well your body is

    September 13, 2025

    An approach based on presumptions for breast training

    September 12, 2025
Healthtost
Home»Men's Health»The One Thing Middle-Aged Men Need to Do to Have a Great Life: Lessons from the World’s Largest Scientific Study of Happiness
Men's Health

The One Thing Middle-Aged Men Need to Do to Have a Great Life: Lessons from the World’s Largest Scientific Study of Happiness

healthtostBy healthtostFebruary 25, 2024No Comments9 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
The One Thing Middle Aged Men Need To Do To Have
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Part 2

In Part 1 of this series I introduced you to the work of Robert Waldinger, MD and Marc Schultz, PhD who co-directed the iconic, 86-year-old Harvard Study of Adult Development. In their book, The Good Life: Lessons from the World’s Largest Scientific Study of Happiness, offer expert guidance on how to live a fully healthy life, love deeply, and find your passion and purpose in the middle and beyond. I also shared the work of Chip Conley, founder of the Modern Elder Academy, and what we can learn from his new book, Learning to Love Midlife: 12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better With Age

In Part 2, I want to introduce you to the three areas where it is most important to apply this wisdom—In our love life, in our work life, and in our inner life. In his book, The Three Marriages: Reimagining Work, Self, and Relationship, David Whyte says,

“Humans are creatures that belong, though they may come to this sense of belonging only through long periods of exile and solitude.’

Most of us have experienced the feelings of exile and loneliness that Whyte describes. I found Whyte’s description of the three marriages very helpful.

“This sense of belonging or not belonging,” says Whyte, “is experienced by most people through three basic dynamics:

  • “First, through relationship with other people and other living things (especially and very personally, with another living breathing person in a relationship or marriage).”
  • “Second, through work. Work is not only a necessity. Good work like a good marriage needs commitment to something bigger than our own detailed, day-to-day needs.
  • “Third, perhaps the most difficult marriage of all beneath the two visible, very public marriages of work and relationship—is the inner and often secret marriage to that difficult mobile boundary of ourselves.

“These are the three marriages of Work, Self and Others.”

Like many men, I have struggled to find success balancing all three “marriages.” I was more successful in my professional life, in part by writing books about what I learned through my failures in my love life and the search for my lost self. My first book, Inside Out: Becoming My Own Man detailing my struggles to understand who I am. The second, book, Looking for love in all the wrong places detailing the confusion I had between “real lasting love” and “sex and romance addiction.” The other fifteen books and twelve hundred articles are my ongoing journey to learn and share what I have learned about integrating all three. Clearly, this is a trip of a lifetime.

One of the main lessons is that success in one marriage cannot be automatically transferred to others. For a long time, I believed that if I could become a successful psychotherapist and make a lot of money, I could attract the woman of my dreams and live happily ever after. It didn’t work as you will find out if you visit my website and watch my introductory video Confessions of a Twice Divorced Marriage Counselor.

Whyte shares a powerful truth in his book.

“Each of these marriages is, at its heart, non-negotiable; that we must give up trying to balance one marriage against another, for example taking time away from work to give more time to a partner, or vice versa, and starting to think about each marriage conversing with, challenging or encouraging the other two’.

I learned an important lesson about how these three marriages can grow integrated from a Native American basket maker. He described our life as a basket woven from many different threads, each necessary for a strong container. Every part of our lives is a leg in this basket. In this case, think of each of the three marriages as a strand, each equally important in building a beautiful basket of life.

He explained to me that it is impossible to weave several strands at once. We must attend to the strand that requires our attention without losing awareness of others. Each strand will get our attention — not all at once.

Instead of feeling like we’re juggling multiple balls of marital responsibilities and work duties while trying to take care of our own needs and ultimately failing, we can give 100% of our attention to our work when we’re working. When it comes time for the marriage leg, we give our full attention to that leg, and later to the self leg. This simple image helped me relax and enter the dance of life.

Another thing I learned from Whyte is the importance of spending quality time alone, preferably in nature, in order to pursue the delusional lover that is my inner self. In my early life I was always preoccupied with pursuing women and succeeding at work so that I could attract or keep the woman who was the object of my current pursuit. And I always tried to gain more power and prestige so that I could prove that I was a man of substance and not an invisible man I feared I really was.

After discussing the importance of doing a good job and finding a life partner, he goes on to discuss the third marriage. “Tree Weddings”, Whyte says,

“he sees that other equally strange human need, to be completely and utterly alone, trawl into the deep riches of an inner peace and quiet, where the self can really seem malleable, mobile, boundless and inviolable, invulnerable to those invisible wounds inflicted from partners and spouses, undisturbed by commitment, drowned in his clamor children and untouched with our endless nature meetings.”

Only a poet like Whyte could capture the many ways in which I had become addicted to love and work. Like many men I know, it took me losing a marriage or two and getting fired from a job or two to finally get permission to find the inner lover I had abandoned so long ago. For me, I began to know my true self on a trip to Alaska when I was thirty-six after my first marriage ended and a second trip to Alaska with my men’s group when I was fifty-six.

I had to get away from work and women to find what I was afraid to see and come to terms with them father’s wound that I experienced when my middle-aged father overdosed on sleeping pills when I was five. Although he didn’t die, our lives were never the same.

I realized that my desire to achieve success at work and find the perfect marriage partner was driven, in part, by unhealed trauma from my childhood. Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) studies have shown that our early experiences can have a significant impact on our adult health and well-being. Adverse childhood experiences or ACEs are potentially traumatic events that occur in childhood. For example:

  • Experiencing violence, abuse or neglect.
  • Living in a home where someone has substance abuse or mental health problems.
  • Witness violence in the home or community.
  • Having a parent who is physically or emotionally absent.

One of the most common and damaging ACEs is growing up with an absent father. Psychologist James Hollis says,

“A father may be physically present but absent in spirit. His absence may be literal through death, divorce, or dysfunction, but more often it is a symbolic absence through silence and the inability to communicate what he also may not have learned.”

Roland Warren, former President of the National Fatherhood Initiative, says:

“Kids have a hole in their soul in the shape of their dad. And if a father is unwilling or unable to fill that role, it can leave a wound that doesn’t heal easily.”

This was certainly the truth for me. The hurt definitely affected my relationships, my sense of self and my professional life.

Although I achieved great outward success at work, it felt more addictive than freeing. My mantra was “too much is not enough”. I always felt like I had something to prove in all aspects of my life. Healing the father wound was crucial to integrating all three of my marriages—at work, in love, and in myself.

Many people who have suffered from adverse childhood experiences and early trauma feel that their lives will forever be limited and that they will never be truly happy. The good news from the Harvard results, as well as other long-term studies, shows that healing can happen regardless of difficult early lives. It helps when we can acknowledge our hurts and talk about our experiences instead of trying to forget they ever happened.

In the good life Drs. Waldinger and Schulz conclude, “As adults, participants in the Harvard study who were able to recognize challenges and talk about them more openly appeared to have a similar ability to draw support from others. Being open and clear about one’s experiences offers another person an opportunity to be helpful.”

Too often, men try to hide their wounds to appear strong. We are afraid of appearing weak and vulnerable. However, I have discovered that our vulnerability is our superpower. My wife, Carlin, has often told me that my willingness to be vulnerable is what she loves and admires most about me. Her love has gone a long way in helping me heal from my first losses. He also said that one of the main reasons we’ve had a successful marriage of forty-four years is because I’ve been in a men’s group for forty-five years.

Among the most important findings from the Harvard Studies was that regardless of our early traumas, there were two vital things that allowed men to find true happiness and joy: “Meeting a caring friend and marrying an accepting spouse ». Cultivating our friendships and close partnerships takes time and effort, but there is nothing more important.

If you want to read more articles like these, I invite you to subscribe to my free, weekly newsletter, which you can do here:

GREAT happiness Largest Lessons Life Men MiddleAged Scientific study Worlds
bhanuprakash.cg
healthtost
  • Website

Related Posts

How Hollywood’s obsession with ‘dry appearance’ hurts men and boys

September 16, 2025

The hidden biology of addiction and cancer

September 16, 2025

The study reveals how the brain interprets certain aromas as a taste

September 13, 2025

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
News

Prenatal exposure to analgesic opioids not linked to increased risk of autism or ADHD

By healthtostSeptember 16, 20250

Previous studies have shown that children who are exposed to opioid pain drugs, while in…

How Hollywood’s obsession with ‘dry appearance’ hurts men and boys

September 16, 2025

Selecting your glow: Facial Oxygen against a microdican Joanna Vargas

September 16, 2025

How can portable devices convert pregnancy monitoring

September 16, 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
TAGS
Baby benefits body brain cancer care Day Diet disease exercise finds Fitness food Guide health healthy heart Improve Life Loss Men mental Natural Nutrition Patients Pregnancy protein research reveals risk routine sex sexual Skin study Therapy time Tips Top Training Treatment ways weight women Workout
About Us
About Us

Welcome to HealthTost, your trusted source for breaking health news, expert insights, and wellness inspiration. At HealthTost, we are committed to delivering accurate, timely, and empowering information to help you make informed decisions about your health and well-being.

Latest Articles

Prenatal exposure to analgesic opioids not linked to increased risk of autism or ADHD

September 16, 2025

How Hollywood’s obsession with ‘dry appearance’ hurts men and boys

September 16, 2025

Selecting your glow: Facial Oxygen against a microdican Joanna Vargas

September 16, 2025
New Comments
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2025 HealthTost. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.