# Savoring Daily Life: Views of Aging as a Moderator of Savoring and Positive Affect

**Authors:** Lydia Ong, Theresa Pauly, Anna Kornadt, Nancy Sin

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.492 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how views of aging influence the emotional benefits of savoring positive daily experiences.

## Contribution

It reveals that older adults with more positive views of aging benefit more from savoring strategies.

## Key findings

- Positive affect increases with more savoring of daily experiences.
- Less positive views of aging are linked to smaller emotional benefits from savoring in older adults.
- The effect of views of aging on savoring is stronger in older Swiss adults than in Canadian adults.

## Abstract

Positive events are common in daily life (e.g., having a good conversation) and savoring strategies can be used to up-regulate positive emotions. Drawing from Socioemotional Selectivity Theory, individuals with relatively less positive views of aging (VoA) might attend more to positive and meaningful experiences in the present as a function of shifting time perspective. Therefore, we hypothesized that people with less positive VoA would derive more positive affect from savoring their positive experiences. This pre-registered study analyzed experience sampling data from an adult lifespan sample from Canada (n = 178 persons and 14 days, Mage=47) and an older adult sample from Switzerland (n = 108 persons and 7 days, Mage=73). VoA were measured through attitudes toward own aging and age stereotypes, while savoring and positive affect were assessed at the end of each day. Two-level multilevel models revealed that positive affect was higher on days with more-than-usual savoring (Canada sample: b = 0.16, 95% CI[0.03, 0.30], p=.019; Switzerland sample: b = 0.42, 95% CI[0.35, 0.49, p<.001). VoA moderated the link between savoring and positive affect in the Swiss sample only, such that individuals with less positive VoA had smaller upticks in positive affect associated with savoring (simple slope for -1 SD: b = 0.34, SE = 0.05, p<.001), compared to those with more positive VoA (simple slope for +1 SD: b = 0.49, SE = 0.05, p<.001). Findings suggest that older adults with more positive VoA may benefit more from savoring, but it remains unclear whether VoA hold the same importance for savoring among younger and middle-aged adults.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760274