Personality and Self-Compassion: Exploring Their Relationships in an Indian Context

Authors

  • Jobi Thomas Thurackal jobithomas.thurackal@ppw.kuleuven.be
    Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences KU Leuven Tiensestraat 102 B-3000 Leuven Belgium
  • Jozef Corveleyn   Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Faculteit Psychologie en Pedagogische; Belgium
  • Jessie Dezutter Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Faculteit Psychologie en Pedagogische; Belgium

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5708/EJMH.11.2016.1-2.2

Keywords:

Big Five, Catholic, emerging adults, HEXACO, honesty-humility, Indian, personality, self-compassion

Abstract

The present study examines the relationship between personality and self-compassion among Indian emerging adults. Two samples of emerging adult males (N1 = 494 Catholic seminarians, N2 = 504 Catholic non-seminarians) completed the Big Five Inventory, the Honesty-Humility Subscale of HEXACO and the Self-Compassion Scale–Short Form. Primarily, we examined the mean-level differences for Big Five factors, honesty-humility and self-compassion between the samples and found that mean-levels were higher for seminarians except for neuroticism. Therefore, we treated the samples separately for further analyses. Secondly, we examined the associations between personality factors of the Big Five, honesty-humility and self-compassion. Consciousness, agreeableness and extraversion were positively associated with self-compassion. Neuroticism had a large negative correlation with self-compassion. Openness to experience had a medium positive relationship with self-compassion among seminarians and a small positive relationship among emerging adult non-seminarians. A medium positive association was found between honesty-humility and self-compassion. Thirdly, we examined the impact of personality factors on self-compassion. Self-compassion was significantly and positively predicted by agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness to experience and honesty-humility for seminarians and by extraversion, agreeableness and conscientiousness for non-seminarians. Neuroticism was a significant negative predictor of self-compassion for both samples.

Published 2016-04-08

How to Cite

Thurackal, J. T., Corveleyn, J., & Dezutter, J. (2016). Personality and Self-Compassion: Exploring Their Relationships in an Indian Context. European Journal of Mental Health, 11(1-2), 18–35. https://doi.org/10.5708/EJMH.11.2016.1-2.2