Publication | Closed Access
The interpretation of life experience and well-being: The sample case of relocation.
211
Citations
22
References
1992
Year
Human MigrationQuality Of LifeSocial PsychologySample CaseSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyLife ExperiencePush FactorsPublic HealthFamily RelationshipsSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesLife ExperiencesCommunity PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyPsychosocial ResearchPositive PsychologyLife SatisfactionSubjective Well-beingSociologySocial Psychological TheoriesLife Course
Social psychological theories of the self postulate mechanisms through which individuals interpret their life experiences to ensure positive self-evaluation. This framework was applied to a sample of aging women (N = 120, M age = 74.9 years) who had experienced community relocation. The authors measured their reasons for moving (push factors), reasons for selecting the new setting, (pull factors), and interpretive mechanisms, including how they compared with others in their new setting, how they were viewed by significant others following the move, how their behaviors changed following relocation, and whether the above evaluations occurred in life domains central to their sense of self. Regression analyses showed that push-pull factors and interpretive mechanisms accounted for substantial variance in multiple aspects of psychological well-being, particularly environmental mastery, purpose in life, and positive relations with others.
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