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Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6
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Page 1: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities

Chapter 6

Page 2: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

“When I was 25, I got testicular cancer and nearly died. I don’t know why I am still alive. I can only guess. I have a tough constitution and my profession taught me how to compete against long odds and big obstacles.”

—Lance Armstrong

Page 3: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Personality

• Personality is thought to comprise several:– traits, characteristics, behaviors, expressions,

moods – feelings as perceived by others

• The complexity of one’s personality is thought to be shaped by:– genetic factors– personal experiences– family dynamics and other social influences

Page 4: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Stress-Prone Personalities

These personalities do not cope with stress well:– Type A personality

– Codependent personality

– Helpless-hopeless personality

Page 5: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Type A Behavior

• Once associated with time urgency is now associated with unresolved anger.

• Greater predictor of CHD than all other risk factors combined

• Prone to sympathetic arousal (increased BP, CHOL, & TG)

• Traits– Urgency, multitasking, ultra-competitiveness, rapid

speech patterns, manipulative control, hyperaggressiveness & free-floating hostility

Page 6: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Type A v. Type D

• Agression v. depression

• Tendency to depression = Negative affect– Worry, irritability, gloom, social inhibition

• Ornish suggests love is not commonly expressed in Type A or D

Page 7: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Codependent Personality

• Increase perceptions of stress & decrease ability to cope

• Addictive in nature & validated by making others dependant

• Enablers• Survival skills• Process addiction• Traits• Behaviors

Page 8: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Helpless-Hopeless Personality

• Low self-esteem• Given up due to repeated failure• External locus of control• Poor self-motivation• Emotional dysfunction resulting in

chronic depression• External locus of control of reinforcing

behavior

Page 9: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Stress-Resistant Personalities

These personalities cope with stress well:1. Hardy Personality

2. Survivor Personality

3. Type R Personality (Sensation Seekers)

Page 10: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

The Hardy Personality

• Commitment (invests oneself in the solution)

• Control (takes control of a situation, doesn’t run from it)

• Challenge (sees opportunity rather than the problems)

Page 11: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Survivor Personality Traits

• A person who responds rather than reacts to danger/stress

• Bi-phase traits (left and right brain skills)– Proud but humble– Selfish but altruistic– Rebellious but cooperative– Spiritual but irreverent– Considered optimists and good at creative

problem solving

Page 12: Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6.

Characteristics of High Self-Esteem

• Connectedness (support groups)

• Uniqueness (special qualities)

• Empowerment (uses inner resources)

• Role models or mentors (has others to look up to)

• Calculated risk taking – Type R (not motivated by fear)