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
  • Depression And Anxiety Raise Risk of C-Section Among Pregnant Women

    Depression And Anxiety Raise Risk of C-Section Among Pregnant Women

    Depression and anxiety in pregnant women may be connected to…

  • Depression Affects 1 In 4 Children In India, Says WHO

    A report by World Health Organization (WHO) mentioned that one…

  • Baby Teeth May Help Predict Mental Health Risks In Later Life

    Baby Teeth May Help Predict Mental Health Risks In Later Life

    The study found that thickness of growth lines in baby…

  • Decent Mental Healthcare Is Beyond Women’s Reach In India

    Decent Mental Healthcare Is Beyond Women’s Reach In India

    Research says that Indian women experience more perceived stigma while…

  • Door-to-door Mental Health Survey For Covid Survivors

    Door-to-door Mental Health Survey For Covid Survivors

    Three medical institutions in Ranchi have taken an initiative to…

  • Sitting For Long Hours Is Linked To Depression And Anxiety: Study

    Sitting For Long Hours Is Linked To Depression And Anxiety: Study

    Long period sitting in the weeks following were likely to…

  • Personal Tragedy Motivates Tribal Women To Help Hundreds Fight Their Mental Illness

    Personal Tragedy Motivates Tribal Women To Help Hundreds Fight Their Mental Illness

    Tribal woman Sumitra Gargai, a member of Ekjut organization, helps…

  • Having A Good Listener Around Can Improve Your Brain Health: Study

    Having A Good Listener Around Can Improve Your Brain Health: Study

    Social interactions prevent cognitive decline in adults.

  • Psychiatrist From Kerala Provides Free Mental Healthcare To Underprivileged in India

    Psychiatrist From Kerala Provides Free Mental Healthcare To Underprivileged in India

    Dr. Manoj Kumar, a Kerala-based psychiatrist, left his UK job…

  • People Enjoy Deep Conversations With Strangers: Study

    People Enjoy Deep Conversations With Strangers: Study

    Deep conversation with strangers benefits people and helps them to…

  • Illness- Or Death-related Messages Motivate Exercise

    Illness- Or Death-related Messages Motivate Exercise

    Fitness apps that emphasize illness and death-related messaging tend to…

  • Exposure To Domestic Violence Delays Babies’ Brain Development

    Exposure To Domestic Violence Delays Babies’ Brain Development

    Study found that infants exposed to domestic violence tend to…

  • Toxicity Of Perfectionism In Indian Society

    Toxicity Of Perfectionism In Indian Society

    Perfectionism may seem beneficial in today’s competitive Indian society, but…

  • Violent Video Games Don’t Lead To Real-Life Violence, Scientists Say

    Violent Video Games Don’t Lead To Real-Life Violence, Scientists Say

    The study found that violent video games don’t lead to…

  • A Cancer Survivor Talks About The Importance Of Mental Health

    A Cancer Survivor Talks About The Importance Of Mental Health

    Farida Rizwan, shares how she battled cancer twice and talks…

  • Short Naps Don’t Relieve Sleep Deprivation, Study Reveals

    Short Naps Don’t Relieve Sleep Deprivation, Study Reveals

    Study found that daytime short naps are not effective

  • Light Workout Sessions Can Boost Memory, Study Reveals

    Mild physical activity can increase the connectivity between parts of…

  • Music Therapy: How It’s Reshaping India’s Approach To Mental Health

    Music Therapy: How It’s Reshaping India’s Approach To Mental Health

    Samay Ajmera, a 26-year-old mental health specialist, shared his journey…

  • Natural Disasters Bring Couples Closer, Study Reveals

    Natural Disasters Bring Couples Closer, Study Reveals

    Natural disasters like hurricanes can bring married couples closer, at…

  • Growing Up With My Mother’s Schizophrenia: A Young Girl’s Story

    Growing Up With My Mother’s Schizophrenia: A Young Girl’s Story

    Nandini Sen, a 24-year-old MBA student from Kolkata, shared with…

  • Researchers Find Why People Remember Stressful Experiences Better

    Researchers Find Why People Remember Stressful Experiences Better

    Stressful experiences are usually remembered more easily than neutral experiences.

  • PTSD Symptoms Vary Throughout The Menstrual Cycle: Study

    PTSD Symptoms Vary Throughout The Menstrual Cycle: Study

    New research found that post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms may…

  • “I Started Having Suicidal Thoughts”: A NGO Worker’s Story

    “I Started Having Suicidal Thoughts”: A NGO Worker’s Story

    30-year-old NGO worker Krishna Patwari shared how he battled with…

  • Sleep Deprivation Can Affect Your Walk, Study Reveals

    Sleep Deprivation Can Affect Your Walk, Study Reveals

    Periodically catching up on your sleep can improve gait control…

  • The Indian Scenario Of Going To Work With A Mental Illness

    The Indian Scenario Of Going To Work With A Mental Illness

    Reshma Valliappan, a Pune-based mental health activist, shared her story…

  • Breakups Are More Painful For Men Than Women: Study

    Breakups Are More Painful For Men Than Women: Study

    A new study of online relationship support finds that men…

  • Suicide And Depression Survivor Ayush Shares His Story

    Suicide And Depression Survivor Ayush Shares His Story

    Suicide survivor 29-year-old Ayush shared his depression story and how…