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Attachment styles and personal growth following romantic breakups: The mediating roles of distress, rumination, and tendency to rebound
Authors
B Kleim
C Hazan
+48 more
C Saffrey
CP Fagundes
D Davis
D Proffitt
DA Sbarra
DA Sbarra
DA Sbarra
DA Sbarra
DP Schneller
DW Russell
GE Birnbaum
GK Rhoades
JA Coan
JA Salo
JA Simpson
JC Anderson
JL Burnette
K Bartholomew
Kathrine Bejanyan
KN Triplett
LG Calhoun
M Mikulincer
M Stroebe
Marianna Mazza
MJJ Kunst
MWC Chan
N Collins
Nelli Ferenczi
NF Marks
PA Boelen
PE Shrout
RA Neimeyer
RC Fraley
RE Lucas
RG Tedeschi
RM Baron
S Nolen-Hoeksema
S Nolen-Hoeksema
S Sprecher
SF Madey
SJ Lepore
SM Monroe
SS Spielmann
T Field
T Tashiro
Tara C. Marshall
TC Marshall
TC Marshall
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
© 2013 Marshall et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.The purpose of this research was to examine the associations of attachment anxiety and avoidance with personal growth following relationship dissolution, and to test breakup distress, rumination, and tendency to rebound with new partners as mediators of these associations. Study 1 (N = 411) and Study 2 (N = 465) measured attachment style, breakup distress, and personal growth; Study 2 additionally measured ruminative reflection, brooding, and proclivity to rebound with new partners. Structural equation modelling revealed in both studies that anxiety was indirectly associated with greater personal growth through heightened breakup distress, whereas avoidance was indirectly associated with lower personal growth through inhibited breakup distress. Study 2 further showed that the positive association of breakup distress with personal growth was accounted for by enhanced reflection and brooding, and that anxious individuals’ greater personal growth was also explained by their proclivity to rebound. These findings suggest that anxious individuals’ hyperactivated breakup distress may act as a catalyst for personal growth by promoting the cognitive processing of breakup-related thoughts and emotions, whereas avoidant individuals’ deactivated distress may inhibit personal growth by suppressing this cognitive work
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