Can Feeling Poorer Than Your Friends Impact Your Mental Health?

Feeling Poorer Than Your Friends Impacts Mental Health
Spread the love

  • A recent study revealed that feeling poorer than your friends can cause poor mental health.
  • An acute sense of poverty and social inequality can also hamper your close friendships and daily functioning.

The Long-term Impact Of Poverty

Long-standing research confirms that socioeconomic inequalities in society are significantly linked to an increased risk of poor mental health.

Particularly, people in poverty face persistent and frequent high levels of stress, financial insecurity, fear of crime, and poor hygiene conditions (like overcrowding or unsafe housing conditions).

Such difficult circumstances make them vulnerable to a wide range of mental health conditions like:

  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Eating disorders
  • Substance use disorders
  • Gambling disorder
  • Hoarding disorder
  • Psychopathy and an inclination toward crime, etc.

Economic Inequality And Mental Health

Feeling poor can go beyond personal consequences and affect our social dynamics. Lacking a sense of economic equality comes with poor self-esteem and a dampened sense of self.

The affected person tends to draw a “social comparison” with others, particularly wealthier folks. Oftentimes, such a comparison results in negative psychological outcomes, comprising:

  • Chronic feelings of inadequacy
  • Poor self-worth
  • Social isolation

A withdrawal from society results in decreased aspects of family and peer support structures. This lack of family and neighborhood resources can lead to more stress, social discrimination and marginalization, stigmatization, and susceptibility to mental disorders.

Such circumstances often trigger criminal tendencies (like theft) to make ends meet and fraught social relationships.

Can Feeling Poorer Than Your Friends Affect Your Well-being?

While the lifetime consequences of poverty are well-known, social scientists have recently started studying how poverty impacts our identities and self-worth.

For instance, a study conducted at the University of Cambridge revealed that feeling poorer than one’s friends, particularly in adolescence, makes one more likely to develop lower self-esteem and a willingness to tolerate bullying.

In fact, adolescents who see themselves as poorer than their friends are 17% more likely to report being bullied or picked on.

The researchers remarked: “Adolescence is an age of transitions when we use social comparisons to make self-judgments and develop our sense of self. Negative judgments about ourselves can bias us to pay attention to information that reinforces a lack of self-worth, which has implications for mental health.

Balancing Friendships And Financial Awareness

Experts recommend that feeling a sense of economic equality among friends is associated with the best outcomes for mental health and social behavior.

Avoiding social comparisons, working towards accepting one’s immediate financial situation and labeling limitations, as well as attempting to better one’s financial security can be a good place to start. It is anyway better to focus on personal goals and happiness rather than material possessions and wealth.

Know More About –

  1. Depression
  2. Gambling Disorder
  3. Eating Disorders
  1. 8 Signs You Have Finally Found A True Best Friend
  2. Making Adult Friends Is Hard: Here Are 40 Reasons Why
  3. 55 Reasons Why Friendships End

Spread the love
  • Coloring Digital Mandalas Can Improve Your Mental Health, Study Says

    Coloring Digital Mandalas Can Improve Your Mental Health, Study Says

    Researchers at Lancaster University are digitally transforming the art of…

  • Is Playing Wordle An Effective Brain Workout?

    Experts explain how the latest word-game app, Wordle, improves our…

  • The FMRP Protein In Neurons Help In Learning And Memory, Study Finds

    The FMRP Protein In Neurons Help In Learning And Memory, Study Finds

    American researchers show how the FMRP protein in neurons works…

  • Humans Display Context-Dependent Behavior In Society, Research Reveals

    Humans Display Context-Dependent Behavior In Society, Research Reveals

    Researchers show how humans display context-dependent behavior while interacting in…

  • Higher Educational Attainment Prevents Dementia, Study Finds

    Higher Educational Attainment Prevents Dementia, Study Finds

    Finnish researchers show how higher educational attainment helps prevent cardiovascular…

  • Migraines Prevent People From Going To Work, Study Says

    Migraines Prevent People From Going To Work, Study Says

    Researchers warn about the severity of headache disorders and their…

  • Bedtime Media Use Makes You Sleep Less, Research Reveals

    Bedtime Media Use Makes You Sleep Less, Research Reveals

    Researchers warn how bedtime media use harms your sleep schedule.

  • Scientists Discover Neuropixels To Record Brain Activity

    Scientists Discover Neuropixels To Record Brain Activity

    Researchers have discovered a tool called Neuropixels to record brain…

  • Recognizing How Social Media Affects The Mental Health of Young Indians

    Experts voice the need to regulate social media use in…

  • Covid-19 Vaccines Improve Mental Health, Research Finds

    Covid-19 Vaccines Improve Mental Health, Research Finds

    Researchers at the research group, Elsevier, show how Covid-19 vaccines…

  • India Is Shifting Gears About Mental Health, Says Deepika Padukone’s Foundation

    Several surveys are noting the changing approach towards mental health…

  • Major Depressive Disorder Mostly Remains Untreated Globally, Study Reveals

    Major Depressive Disorder Mostly Remains Untreated Globally, Study Reveals

    A study published in PLOS Medicine reveals the disparity in…

  • The Brain Region Of Hippocampus Organizes Memories In A Sequence, Study Finds

    The Brain Region Of Hippocampus Organizes Memories In A Sequence, Study Finds

    Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, shed light into…

  • Heart Attack Reduces the Risk of Parkinson’s Disease, Study Says

    Heart Attack Reduces the Risk of Parkinson’s Disease, Study Says

    Researchers from Denmark show how heart attack survivors are at…

  • The Biological Clock Does Not Influence Task Performance, Study Suggests

    The Biological Clock Does Not Influence Task Performance, Study Suggests

    Researchers show how you can increase your task performance without…

  • Coming To Terms With The Mental Health “Pandemic” In Indian School Children

    The closure of schools has triggered a mental health “crisis”…

  • Study Links Increased Duty At Home And Work To Weight Gain In Middle Age

    Study Links Increased Duty At Home And Work To Weight Gain In Middle Age

    A study surveys middle-aged people and reveals how family and…

  • How Do We Come To Terms With The Indian Reality Of Social Exclusion?

    Mental health professionals and social scientists provide insight into the…

  • Impatient And Risk-tolerant People Are Prone To Committing Crimes, Study Finds

    Impatient And Risk-tolerant People Are Prone To Committing Crimes, Study Finds

    Researchers at the University of Copenhagen show how personal preferences…

  • Your Smartphone Identifies You By How You Use Apps, Study Shows

    Your Smartphone Identifies You By How You Use Apps, Study Shows

    A study shows how softwares in smartphones identify you by…

  • Study Reveals The Genetic Link Between Depression And Alzheimer’s Disease

    Study Reveals The Genetic Link Between Depression And Alzheimer’s Disease

    A new study warns how depression leads to Alzheimer’s disease…

  • Juvenile Fibromyalgia: New Study Analyzes Brain Changes

    Juvenile Fibromyalgia: New Study Analyzes Brain Changes

    Researchers at the University of Barcelona show how early symptoms…

  • Coworker Support Enhances Positivity At Work And Home, Research Finds

    Coworker Support Enhances Positivity At Work And Home, Research Finds

    Researchers at the University of Bath’s School of Management show…

  • Green Spaces In Hospitals Reduce Stress, Study Finds

    Green Spaces In Hospitals Reduce Stress, Study Finds

    Researchers at West Virginia University show how healthcare spaces can…

  • ‘Math’ Neurons In The Brain Are Fired During Mental Math, Study Finds

    ‘Math’ Neurons In The Brain Are Fired During Mental Math, Study Finds

    Spread the loveBrain News – Two teams of researchers in…

  • Can You Secure Patient Confidentiality In Mental Health Programs At Your Workplace?

    With the 2017 Mental Health Act mandating mental health at…

  • Students With Attention Problems Are Likely To Cheat In Exams, Study Finds

    Students With Attention Problems Are Likely To Cheat In Exams, Study Finds

    Spread the lovePsychology News – Researchers at the Ohio State…