After adversity, individuals sometimes report adversarial growth - positive changes in their identity, relationships, and worldviews. We examined how narrative methods enhanced understanding of adversarial growth compared to standard questionnaires. Participants (N = 411) from college and community samples reported on their well-being, wrote a narrative about a highly challenging experience, and answered questionnaires on adversarial growth. Results showed that adversarial growth coded in narratives was positively associated with widely used self-report questionnaires of adversarial growth. Unexpectedly, narrative growth did not predict incremental validity in well-being outcomes compared to standard questionnaires. We found unique expressions of adversarial growth in a qualitative analysis of the narratives. We discuss the added value of using narratives for the assessment of adversarial growth.
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Citation
E. R. Blackie, L., Weststrate, N. M., Turner, K., Adler, J. M.McLean, K. C. (2023). Broadening our understanding of adversarial growth: The contribution of narrative methods. Journal of Research in Personality, 103, 104359-. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2023.104359