The Role of Family and Marital Communication in Developing Resilience to Family-of-Origin Adversity |
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Authors: | Kristen Carr Jody Koenig Kellas |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Communication Studies, Texas Christian University;2. Department of Communication Studies, University of Nebraska – Lincoln |
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Abstract: | To explain recovery from adverse experiences, researchers have focused on resilience as a process occurring within individuals. This study extends existing research by positioning resilience as an interpersonal process in which people communicatively interpret and respond to adversity. Married participants who experienced significant adversity in their family of origin (n = 193) reported on their familial and marital communication and personal characteristics. Overall, resilience was influenced by the unique and combined influences of individual, marital, and family factors. Individuals’ optimism and efficacy emerged as predictors of resilience, and communicated support from a marital partner was particularly important for those lower in optimism. People from families with a balance of cohesion and flexibility and strong communication were more resilient, regardless of the amount of adversity they experienced. In unbalanced families, supportive marital communication served in a compensatory role to promote resilience to family of origin adversity. |
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