1. No genuine self-forgiveness without accepting responsibility: Value reaffirmation as a key to maintaining positive self-regard.
- Author
-
Wenzel, Michael, Woodyatt, Lydia, and Hedrick, Kyli
- Subjects
- *
ANALYSIS of variance , *CHI-squared test , *COLLEGE students , *FORGIVENESS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOLOGY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *RESPONSIBILITY , *ROLE playing , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *SELF-perception , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing , *VALUES (Ethics) , *THEORY , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Measures of self-forgiveness that merely focus on the outcome of positive self-regard risk neglecting the process through which offenders restore it. They may thus tap pseudo self-forgiveness where offenders downplay their responsibility for the wrongdoing. For genuine self-forgiveness, the process should instead involve an attenuation of the negative link between responsibility acceptance and positive self-regard. In this paper, we examine how acts of value reaffirmation facilitate genuine self-forgiveness. In Study 1, a role-play experiment (N = 90), participants either confessed their wrongdoing to the victim or not. Although responsibility acceptance was strongly negatively related to reported self-forgiveness (i.e., self-regard), this relationship was tempered when participants confessed their wrongdoing to the victim and, through this, reaffirmed the violated values. In Study 2, a longitudinal study referring to self-reported transgressions (N = 74), responsibility acceptance was negatively related to self-forgiveness measures as well as self-esteem when offenders showed little value reaffirmation, but not when they more strongly reaffirmed the violated values. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF