Turning points are considered to refer to emotional and important events. The present study compared turning point memories to other memories on several ratings and investigated the association between turning points, distress and meaning. Memories may act as organising units in extended narratives, hence the study also tested whether overlap between memories and extended illness narrative was associated with a more coherent narrative. Fifteen patients with breast cancer were asked to tell a 10-minute narrative about their illness course and describe meaning in their illness.
Each patient was asked to recall five memories, to state whether or not the memories were turning points, and to rate memories on both event and phenomenological variables.
Lastly, the patients were asked to rate distress. The narratives were scored for coherence and the memories were scored for thematic content as well as thematic overlap with the narratives. The results showed that all participants rated the mammography as a turning point and that turning points were rated higher on both event and phenomenological variables. Patients reporting more turning points also reported more distress and not finding meaning in the illness and treatment. High degree of overlap between memories and narratives showed a trend towards an association with a more coherent narrative. The present article discusses processes, which may be involved in the interaction between memories and narratives.
Adler, Jonathan M., Robert B. Manning, Rachel Hennein, Julia Winschel, Alessandra Baldari, Kathleen R. Bogart, Michelle R. Nario-Redmond, Joan M. Ostrove, Sarah R. Lowe & Katie Wang
2022. Narrative identity among people with disabilities in the United States during the Covid-19 pandemic: The interdependent self. Journal of Research in Personality 101 ► pp. 104302 ff.
2019. Meeting the Spiritual Care Needs of Emerging Adults with Cancer. Religions 11:1 ► pp. 16 ff.
Åkerström, Malin, David Wästerfors & Katarina Jacobsson
2016. Struggling for One’s Name: Defense Narratives by those Accused of Small-Time Corruption. Sociological Focus 49:2 ► pp. 148 ff.
Luchetti, Martina, Ornella Montebarocci, Nicolino Rossi, Andrea G. Cutti, Angelina R. Sutin & Sharon Dekel
2014. Autobiographical Memory and Psychological Distress in a Sample of Upper-Limb Amputees. PLoS ONE 9:6 ► pp. e99803 ff.
Gómez-Estern, Beatriz Macías & Manuel L de la Mata Benítez
2013. Narratives of migration: Emotions and the interweaving of personal and cultural identity through narrative. Culture & Psychology 19:3 ► pp. 348 ff.
Obodaru, Otilia
2012. The Self Not Taken: How Alternative Selves Develop and How They Influence Our Professional Lives. Academy of Management Review 37:1 ► pp. 34 ff.
de Silveira, Cybèle & Tilmann Habermas
2011. Narrative Means to Manage Responsibility in Life Narratives Across Adolescence. The Journal of Genetic Psychology 172:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Atkinson, Paul
2009. Illness Narratives Revisited: The Failure of Narrative Reductionism. Sociological Research Online 14:5 ► pp. 196 ff.
Aydemir, Nuran, Ali İ Tekcan & Çiğdem Özkara
2009. Remembering the first seizure and the diagnosis of epilepsy: How much impact do they have in our lives?. Epilepsy & Behavior 16:1 ► pp. 156 ff.
Thomsen, Dorthe Kirkegaard
2009. There is more to life stories than memories. Memory 17:4 ► pp. 445 ff.
Thomsen, Dorthe Kirkegaard & Dorthe Berntsen
2008. The cultural life script and life story chapters contribute to the reminiscence bump. Memory 16:4 ► pp. 420 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 25 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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