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Mindfully missing myself: Induced mindfulness causes alienation among poor self-regulators

  • Mindfulness is a popular technique that helps people to get closer to their self. However, recent findings indicate that mindfulness may not benefit everybody. In the present research, we hypothesized that mindfulness promotes alienation from the self among individuals with low abilities to self-regulate affect (state-oriented individuals) but not among individuals with high abilities to self-regulate affect (action-oriented individuals). In two studies with participants who were mostly naïve to mindfulness practices (70% indicated no experience; N1 = 126, 42 men, 84 women, 0 diverse, aged 17–86 years, Mage = 31.87; N2 = 108, 30 men, 75 women, 3 diverse, aged 17–69 years, Mage = 28.00), we tested a mindfulness group (five-minute mindfulness exercise) against a control group (five-minute text reading). We operationalized alienation as lower consistency in repeated preference judgments and a lower tendency to adopt intrinsic over extrinsic goal recommendations. Results showed that, among state-oriented participants, mindfulness led to significantly lower consistency of preference judgments (Study 1) and lower adoption of intrinsic over extrinsic goals (Study 2) compared to text reading. The alienating effect was absent among action-oriented participants. Thus, mindfulness practice may alienate psychologically vulnerable people from their self and hamper access to preferences and intrinsic goals. We discuss our findings within Personality-Systems-Interactions (PSI) theory.

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Metadaten
Author:Niyati ThakurORCiD, Nicola BaumannORCiD
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:385-1-24616
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0303505
Parent Title (English):PLoS ONE
Publisher:PLOS
Place of publication:San Francisco
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Date of completion:2024/05/21
Date of publication:2024/05/21
Publishing institution:Universität Trier
Contributing corporation:The publication was funded by the Open Access Fund of Universität Trier and the German Research Foundation (DFG)
Release Date:2025/04/17
Volume (for the year ...):2024
Issue / no.:19 / 5
Number of pages:18
Institutes:Fachbereich 1 / Psychologie
Licence (German):License LogoCC BY: Creative-Commons-Lizenz 4.0 International

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