Abstract :
Personal life investment (PLI) measures motivational
energy invested in central life domains. We
distinguished between obligatory PLIs, that is, required
investments, and optional PLIs, that is, investments that are
possible but not necessary. Data from the Berlin Aging
Study (N = 516; 70–103 years) were employed to investigate
the validity of this distinction. We further explored
how both PLI types relate to aging satisfaction and whether
associations with validation variables and satisfaction differed
depending on resource limitations (poor health). As
expected based on conceptual affinities between the distinctions
of obligatory-optional PLI and approachavoidance
tendencies, both PLI types showed positive
relations with extraversion (a correlate of approach), but
only obligatory PLI was positively related to neuroticism (a
correlate of avoidance). Optional PLI (not obligatory PLI)was related to higher aging satisfaction, but only in fairly
healthy people. This underscores differential functional
relations of optional PLI depending on resource availability.