Switching Your Personality Sometimes Good For Mental Health

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Also Included In: Mental Health
Article Date: 23 Oct 2010 - 1:00 PDT

Current ratings for:
'Switching Your Personality Sometimes Good For Mental Health'

Patient / Public:4 stars

3.67 (12 votes)

Healthcare Prof:3 and a half stars

3.5 (8 votes)

Article opinions: 4 posts

If you want to feel good about yourself, try acting not like yourself.

In a new study published in the Journal of Personality, Wake Forest University psychologist William Fleeson found the idea of "being true to yourself" often means acting counter to your personality traits. Because authenticity predicts a variety of positive psychological outcomes, Fleeson says his research can help people see they have options for how they behave.

"One implication of these findings is it might be possible for individuals to improve their mental health by acting against their personality traits," says Fleeson. "Being flexible with who you are is OK. It is not denying or disrespecting who you are. People are often too rigid about themselves and stick with the comfortable and familiar. "

Fleeson says adapting to a situation can make people more true to themselves in some circumstances. His study discovered that introverts feel more true to themselves or "authentic" when they are acting extroverted. When a shy person attends a party and acts like a social butterfly, he is likely to report that he feels like he is showing his true self at that time in that situation.

From philosophy to literature, the idea of authenticity is well ingrained in Western culture. William Shakespeare opined, "To thine own self be true," and Jean-Paul Satre was obsessed with the idea of the individual remaining true to one's inner creativity when pitted against the modern conformist state. In psychology, authenticity is the amount that a person is demonstrating his or her true self.

Acting out of character in this way, some would say, suggests people are faking it. Fleeson says the study, co-authored by former Wake Forest graduate student Joshua Wilt, shows that is not the case.

"Authenticity is consistently associated with acting highly extroverted, even for those who characterize themselves as introverts," he says. "Despite the cultural assumption that consistency with one's traits would predict authenticity, it did not."

Fleeson also found that people who think of themselves as disagreeable and rude feel more true to themselves when they are agreeable, considerate, polite and kind. And, people who consider themselves careless feel more true to themselves when they are conscientious.

In addition, his research showed that authenticity or feeling like you are being the real you, is consistently associated with acting emotionally stable and intellectual, regardless of the actor's traits.

The multi-part study involved several groups of college-aged students. One hundred-forty three participated in multiple 50-minute sessions in a laboratory setting where they engaged in different activities, such as playing Twister and discussing medical ethics. Researchers recorded observations. The participants evaluated their own behavior and made judgments about whether their current actions expressed their true selves. The researchers then tested their findings with a sample of adults ranging in age from 18 to 51. The participants also filled out questionnaires assessing personality traits.

Source: Wake Forest University

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Reply to others

posted by N on 29 Oct 2010 at 9:00 am

@ Alli Kizer: The author was describing 2 studies. They did it with college aged students and then did it again with a broader age range to show that the results generalized beyond college students.

@ Karen Frost: My thoughts exactly! Thanks for posting that.

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Yes, but is this reliable?

posted by Alli Kizer on 28 Oct 2010 at 5:46 pm

If I were to look at this article subjectively, with a non-critical view, i would absolutely agree with the research findings. I've found these things true within myself before. However, the terms are vaguely defined, not operationally defined and clear cut. And there is lack of convincing evidence and statistics. Not to mention, there are subtle things that imply this article is not-so-reliable, for example: they said once that this study was done with college-aged students, but later in the same paragraph, they contradict themselves and said the study included people ages 18-51; that is not the age range of a typical college aged student. Which information is right? It's not consistent. While I do agree with some of the general findings, I think this study should have been done with a more scientific and reliable approach.

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True to Themselves or True to Societal Expectations?

posted by Karen Frost on 25 Oct 2010 at 9:57 am

I'd love to see the actual study on this. Especially how being "authentic" was defined for the subjects. It seems to me that there might be a wishful self/perfect self getting mingled in with true self in the study. A self people think they ought to be.

I also think we have to be careful with these findings not to devalue people with a preference for introversion who do not act highly extroverted. I think many of them would object to being called inauthentic for acting within their preferences.

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So true!

posted by Heather Whistler on 25 Oct 2010 at 8:48 am

As someone who is naturally shy, I definitely feel better when I push myself to go out and be with friends. It's easier to stay home and watch TV, but easier isn't always better. This article reminds me of one of my favorite sayings: "Feelings are fleeting. My actions are my life."

I blog about marriage and mental illness at: http://heatherwhistler.wordpress.com/

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