Stress-Prone and Stress-Resistant Personalities Chapter 6
Dec 31, 2015
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
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
Stress-Prone Personalities
These personalities do not cope with stress well:– Type A personality
– Codependent personality
– Helpless-hopeless personality
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
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
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
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
Stress-Resistant Personalities
These personalities cope with stress well:1. Hardy Personality
2. Survivor Personality
3. Type R Personality (Sensation Seekers)
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)
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
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)