Age Differences in Affective Outcomes of Daily Emotion Sharing
Jane Stephenson, Enna Chen, Kathrine Whitman, Laura Carstensen

TL;DR
This study explores how sharing emotions with close relationships affects emotional well-being differently across age groups.
Contribution
It reveals that emotional sharing with non-spousal family members benefits older adults more than younger ones.
Findings
Older adults experienced more positive emotions after sharing with non-spousal family members.
Younger and middle-aged adults felt more positive after sharing emotions with spouses or partners.
Emotional disclosures in close relationships have varying effects on well-being across the lifespan.
Abstract
According to socioemotional selectivity theory (SST), as people age and future time horizons shorten, emotionally meaningful goals are prioritized over exploratory ones. Relatedly, people increasingly engage in selective pruning of social networks that focus on emotionally close relationships. Research has not explored the degree to which older adults discuss emotional experiences with close partners and whether potential benefits of emotional disclosures vary by age. An experience sampling study that sampled emotional experiences at five randomly selected times per day for seven days, generated the data analyzed in the present study. A lifespan sample of 180 participants (aged 18 to 93, M = 57.3) reported whether they shared their emotions with someone and, if so, the person with whom they shared, viz., spouse/partner, other family member, friend, acquaintance, coworker, and stranger.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Attachment and Relationship Dynamics · Identity, Memory, and Therapy
