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      The case for positive emotions in the stress process.

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      Anxiety, stress, and coping
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          For many decades, the stress process was described primarily in terms of negative emotions. However, robust evidence that positive emotions co-occurred with negative emotions during intensely stressful situations suggested the need to consider the possible roles of positive emotions in the stress process. About 10 years ago, these possibilities were incorporated into a revision of stress and coping theory (Folkman, 1997). This article summarizes the research reported during the intervening 10 years that pertains to the revised model. Evidence has accumulated regarding the co-occurrence of positive and negative emotions during stressful periods; the restorative function of positive emotions with respect to physiological, psychological, and social coping resources; and the kinds of coping processes that generate positive emotions including benefit finding and reminding, adaptive goal processes, reordering priorities, and infusing ordinary events with positive meaning. Overall, the evidence supports the propositions set forth in the revised model. Contrary to earlier tendencies to dismiss positive emotions, the evidence indicates they have important functions in the stress process and are related to coping processes that are distinct from those that regulate distress. Including positive emotions in future studies will help address an imbalance between research and clinical practice due to decades of nearly exclusive concern with the negative emotions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Anxiety Stress Coping
          Anxiety, stress, and coping
          Informa UK Limited
          1477-2205
          1061-5806
          Jan 2008
          : 21
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA. folkman@ocim.ucsf.edu
          Article
          785727581
          10.1080/10615800701740457
          18027121
          9250e7c3-088a-4dee-835e-04b04361f445
          History

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