1. Death and gratitude: Death reflection enhances gratitude.
- Author
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Frias, Araceli, Watkins, Philip C., Webber, Amy C., and Froh, Jeffrey J.
- Subjects
DEATH & psychology ,MORTALITY ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CLINICAL trials ,EMOTIONS ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,T-test (Statistics) ,ATTITUDES toward death ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,REPEATED measures design ,UNDERGRADUATES ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Although gratitude is important to the good life, little is known about factors that enhance gratitude. Some have suggested that traumatic events such as near-death experiences and life-threatening illnesses might enhance gratitude. If reflecting on death causes one to appreciate life as a limited resource, this might enhance gratitude. This study investigated this theory. Participants were randomly assigned to a death reflection condition, a traditional mortality salience condition, or to a control condition. Participants in the death reflection and the mortality salience conditions showed enhanced gratitude compared to individuals in the control condition, supporting the theory that becoming aware of one's mortal limitations enhances gratitude for the life that what one has. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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