“…In other words, that means that people who were trained in order to be more self-compassionate, having a non self-critical attitude and a positive perspective towards demanding and difficult situations seem to achieve a better life evaluation. This corroborates a plethora of previous evidence (Neely, et al, 2009;Seligowski, Miron, & Orcutt, 2014;Van Dam, Sheppard, Forsyth, & Earleywine, 2011;Wei, et al, 2011;Yang, 2016) suggesting that high self-compassion may lead to important life satisfaction benefits, which has also been tested and confirmed through recent intervention plans (Bluth, Roberson, & Gaylord, 2015;. However, although Smeets and colleagues' (2014) 3-week self-compassion intervention yielded increases in life satisfaction scores for both groups intervention and control group, this study did not find differences in life satisfaction scores for the control group that received no training.…”