4.4 Article

Engaging in personally meaningful activities is associated with meaning salience and psychological well-being

Journal

JOURNAL OF POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 821-831

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17439760.2019.1651895

Keywords

Meaning in life; daily activities; values; well-being; idiographic assessment

Funding

  1. American Heart Association Southwest Affiliate Predoctoral Fellowship [14PRE18710033]

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Engagement in personally meaningful activities is associated with greater well-being. However, most studies use cross-sectional or recall methods, and the researchers pre-determine which activities are 'meaningful.' This study examined an idiographic measure of meaningful activity participation in relation to well-being. Participants (N = 160; M age = 43.3 years; 77% female) rated the meaningfulness of 46 daily activities at baseline and reported their activities on eight random days over the next 4 weeks. Half the participants also completed measures of meaning salience and mood on the same days. All participants reported on psychological well-being at baseline and 4-week follow-up. Meaningful activity participation was positively associated with meaning salience and positive mood. Average engagement in meaningful activities over 8 days was positively associated with subjective vitality, life satisfaction, and purpose in life at follow-up. An idiographic measure of meaningful activity participation may further be understanding of the relationship between meaningful activity participation and well-being.

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