4.0 Article

Acceptance as a coping reaction: Adaptive or not?

Journal

SWISS JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 4, Pages 281-292

Publisher

VERLAG HANS HUBER
DOI: 10.1024/1421-0185.64.4.281

Keywords

acceptance; coping behavior; mental health; negative events

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Acceptance as a coping reaction to unchangeable negative events,has been discussed controversially. While some studies suggest it is adaptive, others report negative effects on mental health. We propose a distinction between two forms of acceptance reactions: active acceptance, which is associated with positive psychological outcomes, and resigning acceptance, which is associated with negative psychological outcomes. In this study, 534 individuals were surveyed with respect to several hypothetical situations. We tested the proposed acceptance model by confirmatory factor analysis, and examined the convergent and discriminant validity using personality and coping measures (Trier Personality Questionnaire, Bernese Bitterness Questionnaire, COPE). The results support the distinction between the two forms of acceptance reactions, and, in particular, that active acceptance is an adaptive reaction to unchangeable situations.

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