Positive and Negative Emotions and Nonattachment in Vietnamese Buddhists

Authors

  • Hang T. M. Nguyen Author
  • Hoang V. Nguyen Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.20849/ajsss.v3i1.324

Keywords:

positive and negative emotions, nonattachment, Buddhist psychology, psychology of religion

Abstract

Several research have shown that nonattachment, a Buddhist practice, could reduce negative emotions and improve positive emotions (Sahdra & Shaver, 2013; Sahdra, Shaver, & Brown, 2010; Wang, Wong, & Yeh, 2016; Wendling, 2012). We aimed to explore such influences in a sample of Vietnamese Buddhists (N = 472). Our methods included the State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI; Spielberger et al., 1983), the Nonattachment Scale (NAS; Sahdra et al., 2010), and a demographic and religious questionnaire. Results showed that positive emotion scores (M = 2.89, SD = .502) of participants were significantly higher than that of their negative emotion scores (M = 2.10, SD = .587, p < .001). People with strong religious commitment such as monks, lay-people who practiced at pagoda, and lay-people who practiced with sangha had higher positive emotion scores and less negative emotion scores than those whose religious commitment were weak. Nonattachment was positively correlated with positive emotions (r = .47, p < .01) and negatively correlated with negative emotions (r = -.37, p < .01). Nonattachment could also explain 21.7% positive emotions variance (p < .001) and 12.4% negative emotions variance (p < .001). Nonattachment and religious commitment could, therefore, influence greatly positive emotions in Buddhists. This result suggested a discussion about applying nonattachment to prevent emotional problems and improve psychological well-being.

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Published

2018-03-02

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Positive and Negative Emotions and Nonattachment in Vietnamese Buddhists. (2018). Asian Journal of Social Science Studies, 3(1), p32. https://doi.org/10.20849/ajsss.v3i1.324

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