DOI: 10.3390/youth6030084 ISSN: 2673-995X

How You Play Matters More than What You Play: Serious Leisure Qualities as Age-Differentiated Predictors of Adolescent Risk Behaviors

Bruno Matijašević

Serious leisure theory proposes that deep engagement in leisure activities yields personal and social benefits, yet its application to adolescent risk behavior remains unexplored. This cross-sectional study examined whether specific qualities of serious leisure (effort/perseverance, talents/skills, self-expression, activity outcomes, financial benefit, and ethos) predicted four risk behavior domains (delinquency, cyberbullying, eating disorders, sexual risk) among 1141 Croatian adolescents (64.8% female; 60.0% younger cohort aged 14–17, 40.0% older cohort aged 18–20). Serious leisure qualities were assessed with subscales adapted from the Serious Leisure Inventory and Measure (SLIM) and risk behaviors with validated self-report instruments, both administered through an anonymous online questionnaire. Hierarchical regression models revealed that serious leisure qualities explained 5–11% of variance in risk behaviors beyond demographics, with significant age-moderation effects. For younger adolescents, effort and perseverance in leisure activities served as the primary protective factor (r = −0.14 to −0.17), whereas for older adolescents, perceived activity outcomes (satisfaction and personal growth) emerged as the dominant protector (r = −0.12 to −0.21). Conversely, financial benefit derived from leisure consistently predicted higher risk across all domains, particularly cyberbullying (r = 0.35 among younger participants). A significant developmental shift in leisure preferences was observed, with structured activities declining from 27.6% to 18.6% as participants aged (χ2 = 36.91, p < 0.001). These findings suggest that the subjective quality of leisure engagement, rather than the type of activity alone, shapes risk trajectories, with distinct protective mechanisms operating at different developmental stages. Implications for age-tailored leisure-based prevention programs are discussed.

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