Pandemic-activated psychological growth: significance of extraversion, self-consciousness and COVID-19 related anxiety
- PMID: 38014387
- PMCID: PMC10654337
- DOI: 10.5114/cipp.2022.112945
Pandemic-activated psychological growth: significance of extraversion, self-consciousness and COVID-19 related anxiety
Abstract
Background: The sense of threat to health and life in the face of a pandemic, accompanied by difficulties imposed by lockdown, may trigger a serious crisis. Among possible consequences of such a crisis may paradoxically be the phenomenon of psychological growth. The aim of this article is to identify predictors of pandemic-activated psychological growth (PPG). The relationships between extraversion, reflective and ruminative self-consciousness and PPG were the subject of our inquiry. Additionally, a question was posed about the indirect effect of self-consciousness on PPG through anxiety.
Participants and procedure: The study involved 1206 participants aged 18 to 26 years, who declared that the pandemic situation significantly threatened their important life goals. Procedure: cross-sectional design. Four online short questionnaire-measures were used: the Ten-Item Personality Inventory (TIPI), the Rumination-Reflection Questionnaire (RRQ), the Current Self-disposition Scale (CSS), and the Post-traumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI).
Results: Extraversion and reflective self-consciousness were direct predictors of higher PPG, whereas ruminative self-consciousness was directly related to a lower PPG. There was an indirect effect of ruminative self-consciousness on PPG through COVID-19 related anxiety.
Conclusions: Although the results do not confirm the permanence of a growth effect, finding PPG predictors considered as beneficial resources for coping with difficult pandemic circumstances appears to be valuable in the current state of affairs.
Keywords: COVID-19 related anxiety; extraversion; pandemic-activated psychological growth (PPG); reflective and ruminative self-consciousness.
Copyright © Institute of Psychology, University of Gdansk.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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