2014
DOI: 10.1037/a0036554
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You can’t always give what you want: The challenge of providing social support to low self-esteem individuals.

Abstract: It can be challenging for support providers to facilitate effective social support interactions even when they have the best intentions. In the current article, we examine some reasons for this difficulty, with a focus on support recipients' self-esteem as a crucial variable. We predicted that recipients' receptiveness to support would be influenced by both support strategy and recipient self-esteem and that receptiveness in turn would impact providers' perceived caregiving efficacy and relationship quality. S… Show more

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Cited by 98 publications
(85 citation statements)
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References 95 publications
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“…Indeed, giving social support to an individual with low (versus high) self-esteem results in less feelings of happiness and lower perceived relationship quality. 128 In other words, less benefits. These results suggest that the reaction from the receiver of support may influence the giver's health, especially as it relates to the effectiveness of one's support.…”
Section: Support Effectivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, giving social support to an individual with low (versus high) self-esteem results in less feelings of happiness and lower perceived relationship quality. 128 In other words, less benefits. These results suggest that the reaction from the receiver of support may influence the giver's health, especially as it relates to the effectiveness of one's support.…”
Section: Support Effectivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, over time devaluing and lashing out at the partner can lead to the rejection that low‐self‐esteem individuals fear. In particular, because they are faced with the destructive reactions arising from low self‐esteem, partners of people with low self‐esteem become less satisfied over time (Murray, Bellavia, Rose, & Griffin, ; also see Marigold, Cavallo, Holmes, & Wood, ). In addition to being less satisfied, partners may come to expect that low‐self‐esteem individuals will overreact in negative ways to relationship problems.…”
Section: Negative‐direct Regulation Strategies and Partner Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, as a trait, self‐esteem is more difficult to change than social support, even when using interventions among adolescents whose personality is more malleable than that of adults (Hauge, Kvalem, Berget, Enders‐Slegers, & Braastad, ). Additionally, low self‐esteem not only exerts a negative effect on the amount of social support that individuals obtain from their social networks (Marigold, Cavallo, Holmes, & Wood, ), but also influences their perceptions of available social support from others (Lakey & Cassady, ). Hence, the fourth hypothesis is that nurses with higher self‐esteem perceive higher levels of social support.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%