Psychological Maladjustment Mediates the Relation Between Remembrances of Parental Rejection in Childhood and Adults’ Fear of Intimacy: A Multicultural Study

Ronald P. Rohner*, Ania Filus, Tatiana Melendez-Rhodes, Behire Kuyumcu, Francisco Machado, Joanna Roszak, Sadiq Hussain, Yun Joo Chyung, Vincenzo P. Senese, Saeede Daneshmandi, Brien K. Ashdown, Theodoros Giovazolias, Renata Glavak-Tkalić, Siyi Chen, M. Kamal Uddin, Scott Harris, Nilgun Gregory, Marisalva Fávero, Samar Zahra, Julie LeeMaria C. Miranda, Zahra Izadikhah, Carrie M. Brown, Artemis Giotsa, Anita Vulić-Prtorić, Xuan Li, Abdul Khaleque, Gülçin Karadeniz, Márcia Machado, Sana Gul, Dario Bacchini, Amanda N. Faherty, Andrea Zoroja, Rumana Aktar, Raffaella Perrella, Abigail A. Camden, M. Alamgir Hossain, Kishor Roy

*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

29 Citationer (Scopus)

Abstract

This study assesses interpersonal acceptance-rejection theory’s (IPARTheory’s) prediction that adults’ (both men’s and women’s) remembrances of parental (both maternal and paternal) rejection in childhood are likely to be associated with adults’ fear of intimacy, as mediated by adults’ psychological maladjustment and relationship anxiety. The study also assesses the prediction that these associations will not vary significantly by gender, ethnicity, language, culture, or other such defining conditions. To test these predictions a sample of 3,483 young adults in 13 nations responded to the mother and father versions of the Adult Parental Acceptance-Rejection Questionnaire (short forms), Adult Personality Assessment Questionnaire (short form), the Interpersonal Relationship Anxiety Questionnaire, the Fear of Intimacy Scale, and the Revised Personal Information Form. Results of multigroup analyses showed that adults’ remembrances of both maternal and paternal rejection in childhood independently predicted men’s and women’s fear of intimacy in all 13 countries. However, remembered maternal rejection was a significantly stronger predictor of adults’ fear of intimacy than was remembered paternal rejection. Results also confirmed the prediction in all 13 countries and across both genders that both maternal and paternal rejection independently predicted adults’ psychological maladjustment and relationship anxiety, which in turn predicted fear of intimacy. In addition, psychological maladjustment partially mediated the relation between remembrances of maternal and paternal rejection, and adults’ fear of intimacy in all 13 countries and both genders.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftCross-Cultural Research
Vol/bind53
Udgave nummer5
Sider (fra-til)508-542
Antal sider35
ISSN1069-3971
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2019

Bibliografisk note

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© 2019 SAGE Publications.

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