  
Probe Ministries
Mid-Life Transition
Kerby Anderson
Each year more than three million baby boomers turn 40. Now there
is nothing magical about turning 40 per se, but turning 40 does
signal the beginning of a time of introspection and re-evaluation
that generally occurs during the 40-something years.
Millions of people will encounter a mid-life transition in the
1990s. Why does this occur? How does it affect people? And how can
Christians marshall the emotional and spiritual resources to deal
with these changes? These are just a few of the questions we will
address and attempt to answer.
The leading edge of the baby boom has been the first group to hit
this time of transition. Born in the late '40s and early '50s, they
lived in new houses, built on new streets, in new neighborhoods, in
the new American communities known as the suburbs.
When they headed off to school, they sat in new desks and were
taught about Dick and Jane by teachers fresh out of college. They
grew up with television and lived in a world brimming with promise.
In the '60s they graduated from high school and enrolled in college
in record numbers. Then they landed jobs at good salaries in a
still-expanding economy and bought homes before housing prices and
interest rates went through the roof.
Unlike the baby boomers born after them, the leading edge achieved,
in large part, the American dream. They weren't smarter or more
talented. Their success was due simply to being born earlier. But
even though they have achieved a degree of financial success, many
are beginning to encounter a crisis of purpose. They are like the
cartoon that appeared in The New Yorker. The husband turns
to his wife over the breakfast table and says, "The egg timer is
pinging. The toaster is popping. The coffeepot is perking. Is this
it, Alice? Is this the great American dream?"
Millions in this generation will no doubt repeat these questions in
the next two decades. Is this it? Is this the great American dream?
Add to these questions others like: Where is my life going? Is this
all I am ever going to achieve?
In some ways, these are strange questions coming from the leading
edge boomers who enjoy the fruits of the American economy. They
have achieved a measure of success and yet they are asking
questions that signal a coming crisis of purpose. So why a crisis
of purpose? And why now?
The Age 40 Transition
As it enters mid-life, the baby boom generation remains an enigma.
Its members rejected the values of their parents and changed the
structure of their families in ways unimaginable to a previous
generation. But they must now shoulder adult responsibilities and
assume positions of leadership (if they aren't already in them).
Put another way: the baby boom stands at a point of transition.
This is not the first time this generation has collectively faced
a point of transition. When the leading-edge boomers began turning
30, they hit what psychologist Daniel Levinson calls the "Age 30
Transition." The struggle of leaving childhood and entering the
adult years was worked out in a period of stagnant wages and
appreciating house prices. Ultimately the collective angst of the
boom generation turned Gail Sheehy's book Passages: Predictable
Crises of Adult Life into a runaway bestseller. Among other
things, the book assured the baby boomers that they were not alone
in their confrontation with a major lifestage.
The leading edge of this generation is now in the midst of a more
significant transition: the mid-life transition. Turning 40 is no
more a predictor of change than turning 30 was. But somewhere in
that time period, mid-life re-evaluation begins. It is a stage in
which men and women begin to evaluate and question their priorities
and deal with their dreams and aspirations.
While this transition is both somber and serious, some have
attempted to inject some levity into the discussion. Lawyer Ron
Katz found the YUPPIE designation an inaccurate description of his
friends' lifestyle. So he coined, somewhat facetiously, yet another
acronym to describe boomers at this stage. No longer rolling
stones, but not yet the grateful dead, they're MOSS--middle-age,
overstressed, semi-affluent suburbanites.
According to Katz, MOSS (or MOSSY, if you prefer the adjective) is
what YUPPIES have become in the 1990s. As Katz says, a MOSS is "41
years old; more overstressed than overworked; affluent but doesn't
feel that way." A MOSS also is beginning to understand why the
world hasn't changed more over the past 25 years; [and] hopes that
the world changes somewhat less over the next 30 years.
And while some social commentators want to discount the existence
of a mid-life crisis, psychologists and sociologists assure us that
something is indeed taking place. It is not merely media hype or
self-fulfilling prophecy. During the years of mid-life, a
substantial re-evaluation is taking place.
In actuality, the transition to mid-life is gradual. There are no
major landmarks or signposts that signal our entry into this new
and uncharted domain. Perhaps that is why there are so many jokes
about turning 40 even though nothing of any significance actually
happens on one's 40th birthday. Turning 40 provides a visible
demarcation of a gradual process.
The Seasons of a Man's Life
In the preface of his book The Seasons of a Man's Life,
Daniel Levinson says, "Adults hope that life begins at 40--but the
great anxiety is that it ends there." Fearing this may be true,
many baby boomers are beginning to become "frantic at forty-
something." They are making a transition from the years of their
youth to a time of adulthood without any hope or optimism.
In his book, Daniel Levinson describes a number of developmental
stages in adult life. He delineates an early adult era from the
mid-20s to the late 30s. He also discusses a middle adult era from
the mid-40s to the early 60s. What is in-between is what he calls
the years of mid-life transition. He sees these years as a bridge
between young adulthood and senior membership in one's occupational
world.
The psychological study done by Levinson focused on men between the
ages of 35 and 45. He found that about 80 percent of those studied
went through a time of personal crisis and re-evaluation during
this mid-life transition. Levinson argued that the 20 percent that
did not encounter a struggle were in a state of denial and would go
through this transition later. This raises the first of two
assumptions in these studies.
While the stages and themes documented by these studies are
descriptive, they are by no means normative. As a Christian, I
reject a deterministic model which predicts that everyone will go
through a certain stage. While writing an earlier book on the
subject of death and dying, I found that not all people go through
the same psychological stages of grief. Christians, for example,
who have come to terms with their own mortality and the mortality
of their loved ones can face death and agree with the apostle Paul
that it is better "to be absent from the body and present with the
Lord." Likewise, people who have come to grips with their place in
the world may not face a wrenching mid-life crisis.
A second assumption has to do with the subjects of these studies.
The major studies of adult development (including Levinson's study)
used male subjects born before the 1930 depression. Comparable
studies for women were not done, and studies of baby boomers have
not been done.
The men in the study have at least three things in common. They
grew up in stable families; they had realistic goals for their
lives; and they became adults in an expanding economy. Few
experienced divorces in their families. Most had simple goals like
"being able to provide for their families" and "being a good
father." They also built their careers in a flourishing economic
climate.
These assumptions are not true for the baby boom generation. They
grew up in less-stable families and now are raising families in a
world where divorce is very common. Baby boomers have much greater
expectations and thus have personal goals that are much more
difficult to fulfill. And baby boomers reached adulthood when the
economy was shrinking.
Such differences make it difficult to apply these studies directly
to the boom generation. While some investigators argue that talk
about a true mid-life "crisis" is overblown, most believe the
current generation will be even more susceptible to a crisis than
the previous one.
New Roles
In his research, Levinson discovered a number of themes that
surface during the time of mid-life transition. The first is that
mid-life transition involves adapting to new roles and
responsibilities. By the time you are in your 30s, you are expected
to think and behave like a parent. You can postpone this for
awhile, and the boom generation has been fairly successful at
postponing adulthood by extending the period simply called "youth."
Boomers extended adolescence into their 20s and even into their
30s. Now they are facing different and more demanding sets of roles
and expectations. They are taking senior positions in their jobs
and must provide care for both their children and their aging
parents.
A man in his 40s is usually regarded by people in their 20s as a
full generation removed. He is seen more as a parent than as a
brother. In the minds of those who are younger, he is "Dad" rather
than "buddy." This message comes first as a surprise and then as an
irritation to a man in mid-life.
Another way to look at this transition is to use the definitions of
generations used by Spanish philosopher José Ortega y
Gasset. He identifies five generations: childhood, youth,
initiation, dominance, and old age.
The Initiation generation includes the time of mid-life transition
and leads to what he calls the Dominant Generation, where
individuals are expected to assume the mantle of leadership,
authority, and responsibility. According to Ortega y Gasset, the
Initiation and Dominant generations are the two most crucial ones.
The relations between them and the successful passing of authority
from one to another affect the fate of society. During the 1990s
and the early part of the 21st century, this transition from the
older generation to the younger generation will be taking place.
Mortality
The second stage of mid-life transition involves dealing with our
own mortality. In mid-life we become increasingly aware of death.
Living in a death-denying culture shields us from a sense of our
own mortality. And being young further heightens our sense of
indestructibility. Teenagers and young adults tend to think of
themselves as "bullet-proof" and destined for immortality. But by
the age of 40, we have seen many people not much older than
ourselves succumb to cancer and heart attacks. Many of us have seen
death in our own families. The death of a parent is a clear signal
that we are now on our own. It also reminds us how short life
really is.
People going through this transition not only face a crisis of
mortality; they face a crisis of growing old. Baby boomers are
entering what I call the "Ache Age." Vigorous exercise is followed
by hurting muscles that seem to stay sore longer. Cuts and bruises
that used to heal almost overnight take much longer to heal. Such
physiological reminders also focus our attention on our own
mortality.
Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross has identified five different stages of
grief. Although these describe the psychological stages of a
patient who is dying, they correlate remarkably well with the
feelings people go through in mid-life. Whether it is the death of
an individual or the death of their dreams, the emotional feelings
are often the same.
Culminating Events
A mid-life transition surfaces from a culminating event. This event
serves as a marker for a conclusion of young adulthood. It may be
a very obvious one like a promotion or being fired from a job. But
it also might be something that no one would be able to identify,
not even our spouses. It is a milestone that helps us see that one
of our life's dreams is not going to be realized, and it provides
an estimate for future success or fulfillment.
In The Seasons of a Man's Life, Daniel Levinson argues that
the dreams we have are so compelling that nothing short of total
success will satisfy. In other words, there is no such thing as
modest success. Frequently, the culminating event is seen as
evidence of flawed success and often as total failure.
To those on the outside looking in, a man may seem like he has
reached the pinnacle of success. But they can't see into his
irrational mind affected by sin. He may have dreams that are
hopelessly unrealistic, especially in youth.
It may be that a man is the president of a very successful company,
but nevertheless feels like a failure because his dream was to be
President of the United States. A man who is very athletic and runs
marathons feels unfulfilled because his dream was to play in the
NBA. A woman who is one of the top salespeople in the company may
feel inadequate because she wanted a family and cannot have kids.
Intense Introspection
Fourth, mid-life transition involves intense introspection. A
consistent pattern of adult life is an early struggle in adulthood
to achieve a measure of success followed by a mid-life appraisal of
one's values and philosophy of life. A man around 40 begins to
reassess the meaning of life and begins reconsidering the fate of
his youthful dreams. He is asking major questions like: Is this all
I am going to do the rest of my life? Is this all I am going to
achieve?
Many people find that what they thought was going to make them
happy isn't making them happy. They enjoyed law school and the
first few years of law. But the thought of practicing law for the
rest of their live is not very fulfilling. They enjoyed the first
few years selling life insurance, but the thought of selling
insurance for another 30 years sounds more like torture than a
career.
This is a time when an individual shines a light on his or her
accomplishments and sets an agenda for the second half of life.
There may or may not be major mid-course corrections depending on
the evaluation.
Leaving a Legacy
Finally, a mid-life transition involves leaving a legacy. As we
come to grips with our own mortality, we inevitably desire
immortality, which is "one of the strongest and least malleable of
human motives." Leaving a legacy means finding a form of
immortality by leaving something behind. One is reminded of Woody
Allen's quip that he didn't want to be immortal by leaving
something behind; he wanted to be immortal by not dying. But since
that is not possible, then an individual seeks to leave a legacy,
and that quest usually forms the core of the second half of a
person's life.
Successful resolution of mid-life comes from determining what
legacy--possessions, memories, ministry--we will leave behind. The
legacy may encompass family, work, or all of society. It may
involve contributions as a parent, spouse, leader, or mentor. These
elements of the legacy define the path we will take in the second
half of our lives.
Application
These then are the basic themes of the mid-life transition. For the
Christian, there are two points of application. First is a personal
application. If you are going through mid-life, recognize that you
are going to be in a daily battle over three issues.
First, you will have a daily battle with your thoughts. We need to
"take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ" (2
Corinthians 10:5). We will also have a daily battle with
temptation. A key verse to memorize is 1 Corinthians 10:13. And
finally we will have a daily battle with sin and must confess our
sins (1 John 1:8-9).
The second point of application is to our personal ministry. If we
are attentive to this mid-life transition, we will be able to
minister to millions of people who will go through this struggle.
The 1990s might be the greatest time for harvest in this
generation. Until now, most baby boomers have had few struggles. As
they confront mid-life, many will be asking important questions
that can lead to evangelistic opportunities.
Here are two ways you can help. First, a knowledge of the
transition can ease the struggle. Daniel Levinson says knowing the
transition is coming is an important antidote to its effects. So a
knowledge of this transition can help you reach out.
Second, a knowledge of the Bible can help you to minister. A
generation that has been impervious to the gospel may be more
willing to listen as it asks the fundamental questions of life. If
we reach out in love with a biblical message, we can make a
difference.
© 1993 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Kerby Anderson is the president of Probe
Ministries International. He received his B.S. from Oregon State
University, M.F.S. from Yale University, and M.A. from Georgetown
University. He is the author of several books, including Genetic
Engineering, Origin Science, Living Ethically in the 90s, Signs of
Warning, Signs of Hope, and Moral Dilemmas. He also
served as general editor for Marriage, Family and Sexuality.
He is a nationally syndicated columnist whose editorials have
appeared in the Dallas Morning News, the Miami
Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston
Post.
He is the host of "Probe," and frequently serves as guest host on
"Point of View" (USA Radio Network). He can be reached via e-mail
at kerby@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
Probe Ministries
1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2008 Probe Ministries
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Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 14 July 2002
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