DOI: 10.1177/13591053231209668 ISSN: 1359-1053

Does emotion regulation mediate the relationship between self-compassion and subjective well-being? A cross-sectional study of adults living in the United States

Stacey Michelle Ericson, Joshua Paul Gallagher, Alicia Josephine Federico, Joshua James Fleming, Daniel Froggatt, Adel Eleid, Bridget Mary Finn, Kim Johnston, Ru Ying Cai
  • Applied Psychology

Subjective well-being influences mental and physical health. Fortunately, interventions exist to improve people’s subjective well-being. Emotion regulation and self-compassion are two transdiagnostic factors that impact mental health and have been separately shown to be associated with subjective well-being. However, their combined relationship with subjective well-being has not yet been examined. To address this gap, the current novel study aimed to determine if there is a combined relationship between self-compassion, emotion regulation, and dimensions of subjective well-being cross-sectionally in adults living in the United States. Participants ( n = 559; 50% female; Mage = 57.70 years) completed an online survey via Prime Panels from CloudResearch, capturing their responses on the interested constructs. Analyses showed that emotion regulation significantly mediated the relationships between self-compassion and various subjective well-being dimensions, specifically, positive affect ( d = 0.32), negative affect ( d = 1.17), and eudemonic well-being ( d = 0.79). Our findings have both clinical and research implications.