Author(s) |
Phillips, Wendy J
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Publication Date |
2021-10
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Abstract |
Self-compassion is theorised to represent a synergistic system of interplay between self-kindness, self-judgement, common humanity, isolation, mindfulness, and overidentification. This study evaluated this proposition by identifying how the six components tend to interact within individuals to form self-compassion mindsets. Australian adults (<I>N</I> = 353; <I>M</I><sub><I>age</I></sub> = 41.54; 50.1% male) completed a web-based survey that included the Self-Compassion Scale (SCS). Latent Profile Analysis of the six SCS subscale variables identified three self-compassion mindsets in the sample that reflected incremental increases in total self-compassion: <I>Uncompassionate Self-Responding, Moderately Self-Compassionate</I>, and <I>Highly Self-Compassionate</I>. A second LPA in a student sample validated the three-mindset solution. The highly self-compassionate mindset was over-represented by male, older, retired, and highly educated individuals and the uncompassionate self-responding profile was over-represented by females and students. Partial correlations revealed that the predictive strength of each self-compassion component on psychological well-being and emotion regulation differed across mindsets. Results indicate that the positive and negative self-compassion components operate in unison, and that vulnerable individuals may benefit most from training programs that focus on increasing self-kindness to improve psychological well-being or on decreasing overidentification to improve emotion regulation.
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Citation |
Current Psychology, 40(10), p. 5040-5053
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ISSN |
1936-4733
1046-1310
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Link | |
Publisher |
Springer New York LLC
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Title |
Self-compassion mindsets: The components of the self-compassion scale operate as a balanced system within individuals
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Type of document |
Journal Article
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Entity Type |
Publication
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