David B Newman1, John B Nezlek2,3, Todd M Thrash2. 1. University of Southern California. 2. College of William & Mary. 3. University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Poznań.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Research on searching for meaning in life has focused on trait-level relationships rather than within-person relationships. Our goal was to examine within-person relationships between daily states of searching for meaning in life, daily states of presence of meaning in life, and daily states of well-being. METHOD: To advance our understanding of searching for meaning in life, we conducted a daily diary study with two samples in which 254 undergraduate students (Mage = 18.54, SD = 1.55; 66.9% female) completed daily reports of presence and search for meaning in life and well-being for 2 weeks (n = 3,288). RESULTS: Between persons, search was negatively related to presence and well-being. In contrast, within persons, daily search was positively related to presence and well-being. Relationships between daily search and daily well-being were mediated by daily presence of meaning in life. Lagged analyses indicated that greater search on one day led to greater presence the next day. CONCLUSIONS: The implications of these within-person findings suggest that researchers should reconsider the potential consequences that occur from searching for meaning in life, including the possibility that greater searching is associated with increased well-being.
OBJECTIVE: Research on searching for meaning in life has focused on trait-level relationships rather than within-person relationships. Our goal was to examine within-person relationships between daily states of searching for meaning in life, daily states of presence of meaning in life, and daily states of well-being. METHOD: To advance our understanding of searching for meaning in life, we conducted a daily diary study with two samples in which 254 undergraduate students (Mage = 18.54, SD = 1.55; 66.9% female) completed daily reports of presence and search for meaning in life and well-being for 2 weeks (n = 3,288). RESULTS: Between persons, search was negatively related to presence and well-being. In contrast, within persons, daily search was positively related to presence and well-being. Relationships between daily search and daily well-being were mediated by daily presence of meaning in life. Lagged analyses indicated that greater search on one day led to greater presence the next day. CONCLUSIONS: The implications of these within-person findings suggest that researchers should reconsider the potential consequences that occur from searching for meaning in life, including the possibility that greater searching is associated with increased well-being.
Authors: Allen C Sherman; Mark L Williams; Benjamin C Amick; Teresa J Hudson; Erick L Messias; Stephanie Simonton-Atchley Journal: Curr Psychol Date: 2022-07-06
Authors: Małgorzata Szcześniak; Andrzej Potemkowski; Waldemar Brola; Zdzisław Kroplewski; Roman Ryszard Szałachowski; Marek Zak; Maciej Wilski; Piotr Sobolewski; Halina Bartosik-Psujek; Katarzyna Kapica-Topczewska; Joanna Tarasiuk; Agata Czarnowska; Alina Kułakowska; Beata Zakrzewska-Pniewska; Katarzyna Kubicka-Bączyk; Natalia Morawiec; Monika Adamczyk-Sowa; Adam Stępień; Jacek Zaborski; Anna Ratajczak; Marcin Ratajczak Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-04-29 Impact factor: 4.614