Lecture 4: Sacrificial Goals Flashcards

1
Q

challenges of elite gymnasts

A

Many young female gymnasts end up socially immune, physically stunted, prone to depression, and suffering from eating disorders

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2
Q

Joan Ryan on gymnastics

A

gymnastics can be fun recreationally but elite gymnastics can become dangerous because it results in too much self-discipline

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3
Q

Kerry Strug and the goal medal

A

While seriously injured and knowing an intensely painful and possibly harmful experience was awaiting her, Strug still had to execute a strenuous and demanding routine with world-class skill

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4
Q

transcendence

A

seeing beyond the immediate stimulus environment by focusing on more long-range goals that are higher in value

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5
Q

higher value goals involve:

A
  • Longer time spans
  • More extensive networks of meaningful associations
  • More distal and abstract goals
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6
Q

religion and self-control

A

Religious practices can help children and adolescents develop more self-control

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7
Q

self-regulation of elite gymnastics

A
  • No hanging out
  • No TV watching
  • No going on dates
  • No spontaneous, uncontrolled eating
  • No giving in to minor injuries
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8
Q

Baumeister’s account of self-control

A
  • Difficulties with self-control either involve under-regulation or misregulation
  • But, we can’t over-regulate self-control
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9
Q

under-regulation

A

not having standards, monitoring, or self-regulatory strength

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10
Q

what is the most common kind of difficulty people experience with self-control?

A

Under-regulation

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11
Q

misregulation

A

exerting self-control in a way that fails to bring about the desired results because the efforts are misguided or wasted

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12
Q

types of misregulation

A
  • Misunderstood contingencies: When individuals incorrectly perceive or interpret the relationship between their actions and the outcomes they experience. (ex. Unrequited love)
  • Trying to control the uncontrollable (ex. Choking in a performance setting)
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13
Q

what would Baumeister say about Keri Strug’s self-control?

A

he would call it ideal self-control

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14
Q

the humanistic perspective on self-control

A

considers whether the pursuit of goal support leads to:
1) Holistic functioning
2) Self-actualization
3) Basic need satisfaction

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15
Q

Sheldon 2010 goal pursuit and need satisfaction study

A

found that goal progress results in enhanced well-being only if goal pursuit is associated with basic need satisfaction (autonomy, relatedness, and competence)

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16
Q

circumstance goal

A

a neutral goal to improve one’s circumstances

17
Q

what would a humanist say about Keri Strug’s self-control?

A

Kerri Strug’s performance is an example of excessive self-control but she was just doing what she was trained to do

18
Q

retired gymnasts study method

A
  • Structured interviews with 5 elite British women gymnasts
  • Mean age= 24
  • Competed nationally or internationally
  • Retired at 16
  • Practice 30 hours per week at their peak
19
Q

retired gymnasts study findings

A

Found that all of the girls looked back on their gymnastic days with regret and were left feeling lost and helpless when they retired

20
Q

retired gymnasts reported that during their gymnastics career, they:

A
  • Lived for gymnastics
  • Were gymnasts vs. people who do gymnastics
  • Experienced eternal pressure to strive for perfection
  • Were seen as dispensable tools
21
Q

The Story of Shun Fujimoto

A
  • Fujimoto landed the parallel bars with an injured leg, which he ended up breaking
  • This is idealized as exercising good self-control
22
Q

Kerri Strug’s autobiography

A

Sheds light on additional motivations, including her older sister & parental encouragement to relax

23
Q

Holding et al. longitudinal career goals study method

A

conducted a 6-wave longitudinal study of young adults’ sacrifice of basic needs in pursuit of career goals in 2020

24
Q

Holding et al. longitudinal career goals study variables

A
  • Sacrifices for these goals (maintenance activities, leisure activities, psychological needs)
  • Antecedents of sacrifice (motivations for career, motivations for sacrifice)
  • Outcomes (goal progress, psychological distress)
  • Mediator (frustration over a year)
25
Q

Holding et al. longitudinal career goals study findings

A

Found that sacrificing psychological needs, but not maintenance or leisure activities resulted in need frustration, and subsequently, an increase in psychological distress and a decrease in career goal progress

26
Q

ego control (Jack Block)

A

the extent to which impulses and feelings are expressed or suppressed

27
Q

impulsivity vs. impulse control

A

“We should not favour the replacement of unbridled impulsivity with categorical pervasive and rigid impulse control.”

28
Q

what distinguishes healthy self-control?

A

The capacity to choose whether and when to persevere, to control oneself, to follow the rules rather than the simple tendency to do these things in every situation

29
Q

the self-control problem of elite gymnasts

A

focus on self-control sacrifices satisfaction of essential psychological needs

30
Q

goal action plan components

A
  • Focus attention
  • Give effort
  • Persist