Why Middle Age Is Becoming America’s Breaking Point Forget the old clichés about midlife crises being all about sports cars and questionable fashion choices. For a growing number of Americans, the real crisis is happening quietly: more loneliness, more stress, and worse health than ever before. That’s the verdict from a large international study out of Arizona State University, which paints a stark picture of what it means to be middle-aged in the U.S. today ( Arizona State University, 2026 ). Midlife in America: More Lonely, More Stressed If you were born in the 1960s or early 1970s, you’re statistically more likely to be lonely, depressed, and in declining health compared to your parents at the same age ( Infurna et al., 2026 ). The study, which analyzed data from 17 countries, found that these problems are uniquely American. In many other wealthy nations—especially in parts of Northern Europe—middle-aged adults are actually faring better than previous generations. So what’s go...