Life Experiences Throughout the Lifespan: What Do People Say (or Not) About Them?

被引:5
|
作者
Azevedo, Vanessa [1 ]
Martins, Carla [1 ]
Maia, Angela [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minho, Sch Psychol, Campus Gualtar, P-4710057 Braga, Portugal
关键词
Life events; Retrospective recall; Self-report; Personal meanings; Lifespan; READJUSTMENT RATING-SCALE; ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES; MISSING DATA; RETROSPECTIVE REPORTS; EVENTS RESEARCH; MALTREATMENT; IMPACT; PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; RESOLUTION; QUALITY;
D O I
10.1007/s10804-017-9277-6
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Life experiences have been a topic of interest for researchers and clinicians for decades. Current knowledge is rooted in two distinct approaches, i.e., personality psychology and psychosomatics. Whereas the first is interested in ordinary life stories of nonclinical individuals, based on a more qualitative, in-depth, and person-driven approach, psychosomatics stresses negative events, mainly in clinical samples, and presents a more quantitative, general, and construct-driven approach. Consequently, available evidence is dispersed and unrelated and many basic questions remain unanswered. This study aimed to explore occurrence, developmental stage, valence, and impact of life experiences and to analyze critical answering patterns (i.e., "I don't remember," missingness). Through a cross-sectional retrospective design, 394 adults from the community answered the Lifetime Experiences Scale, which covers 75 life experiences organized in eight domains (i.e., school, job, health, leisure, living conditions, adverse experiences, achievements, and people and relationships). Occurrence of life experiences varied greatly, and the mean number of experiences reported was approximately 30. Regarding developmental stage, most experiences were reported in just one stage-mainly adulthood-however, some could be considered chronic. Globally, life experiences tended to be clearly rated as positive or as negative; additionally, assessed experiences were mainly appraised as positive. Moreover, participants presented their experiences as significant, rating them as high impact. Overall, critical answering patterns were not very expressive: "I don't remember" and missing answers were below 2 and 5%, respectively, in the majority of experiences. These findings offer several important new insights, suggesting that life experiences are mainly an idiosyncratic topic.
引用
收藏
页码:69 / 85
页数:17
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