Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
889876 Personality and Individual Differences 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A recent publication suggests that perfectionism undermines flourishing.•We examined perfectionism and flourishing in a sample of university students.•Socially prescribed perfectionism showed negative relationships with flourishing.•In contrast, self-oriented perfectionism showed positive relationships.•Perfectionistic concerns (but not perfectionistic strivings) undermine flourishing.

Flourishing describes an optimal state of mental health characterized by emotional, psychological, and social well-being. In a recent publication, Flett and Hewitt (2015) suggested that perfectionism prevents people from flourishing. Perfectionism, however, is a multidimensional personality characteristic, and its various dimensions show different relationships with indicators of subjective well-being. In the first empirical study of perfectionism and flourishing, we examined the relationships of multidimensional perfectionism (self-oriented, other-oriented, and socially prescribed perfectionism) and self-reported flourishing in the past two weeks. Results from the sample of 388 university students revealed that only socially prescribed perfectionism showed a negative relationship with flourishing, whereas self-oriented perfectionism showed a positive relationship. These results were unchanged when positive and negative affect were controlled statistically. Our findings indicate that not all dimensions of perfectionism undermine flourishing and that it is important to differentiate perfectionistic strivings and concerns when regarding the perfectionism–flourishing relationship.

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