Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Accept Your Situation To Ward Off Frustration

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Apr, 2015 12:48 PM
    Unconscious acceptance of your current situation -- good or bad -- works better in regulating frustrating emotion, say researchers from Southwest University of China.
     
    They showed that unconscious priming of acceptance attitude works well in reducing frustrating emotion, at little cost of cognitive efforts but producing best mood stability during frustration.
     
    This provides an important perspective to cope daily frustration, the education of adaptive coping and the development of a healthy personality.
     
    Life is full of aborted goals, from dating, university admission to job hunting and so on. Where there is goal pursuit, there are setbacks and frustration.
     
    "Thus, the effective coping of frustration is of vital importance to human life, both social functioning and health. The acceptance has proven useful in mitigating the long-term consequence of negative events," said Jiajin Yuan, associate professor of psychology in Southwest University.
     
    This study used a difficult arithmetic task paired with feedback to induce frustrating emotion.
     
    The results confirmed that conscious, effortful acceptance of frustrating emotion resulted in a short-term reduction of positive effects.
     
    To induce unconscious acceptance, subjects were asked to select four out of five words, one of which is semantically related to "acceptance", to make up a proper sentence.
     
    This strategy encourages people to adopt an accepting, observing, non-judgmental attitude to frustrating emotions, rather than trying to avoid or modify them.
     
    However, the conscious acceptance of negative emotions may intensify immediate unpleasant feelings, despite benefits for long-term health.
     
    "Also, exercising acceptance entails dropping our natural, instinctual responses to frustration, but instead learning to accept whatever we experience. Obviously, this process is costly and effortful," Yuan added.
     
    These results may have implication for early education of frustration coping.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love
    Online daters are not looking for love outside their cultural background, reveals a study, adding that women are significantly more likely than men to prefer...

    Online daters not looking for inter-racial love

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids
    Four minutes of physical activity could improve behaviour in the classroom for primary school students, showed a research....

    'FUNtervals' improve behaviour of kids

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep
    WASHINGTON — Most people in the United States and Canada are getting an extra hour of sleep this weekend, thanks to the annual shift back to standard time.

    Did You Remember To Set Your Clocks Back An Hour? If You Did, You Got An Extra Hour Of Sleep

    How you can make others behave in a group

    How you can make others behave in a group
    In group activities where some members tend to behave egoistically, it is possible for even one person to exert influence on others...

    How you can make others behave in a group

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer
    "You need more time to mull over and cope with what happened to fully comprehend it," said lead authors Philippe Verduyn and...

    Feeling of sadness lingers on longer

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter
    Reading bedtime stories is a positive way to interact with your kids, but it would not influence children's intelligence later in life, said a research....

    Reading bedtime stories won't make your kids smarter