Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Life's Harsh Lessons 'Make You More Gullible'-Study
#1
Life's Harsh Lessons 'Make You More Gullible'-Study

Psychologists discover adversity makes people more susceptible to suggestion and lies

People who have suffered life's hard knocks while growing up tend to be more gullible than those who have been more sheltered, startling new findings from the University of Leicester reveal.

A six-month study in the University's School of Psychology found that rather than 'toughening up' individuals, adverse experiences in childhood and adolescence meant that these people were vulnerable to being mislead.

The research analysing results from 60 participants suggest that such people could, for example, be more open to suggestion in police interrogations or to be influenced by the media or advertising campaigns.

The study found that while some people may indeed become more ‘hard-nosed’ through adversity, the majority become less trusting of their own judgement.

Kim Drake, a doctoral student at the University of Leicester, conducted the research with Professor Ray Bull and Dr Julian Boon of the School of Psychology. Kim said:

"People who have experienced an adverse childhood and adolescence are more likely to come to believe information that isn't true- in short they are more suggestible, and easily mislead which may in turn impact upon their future life choices; they might succumb to peer pressure more readily."

'Adverse life experiences' examined included major personal illnesses/injuries, miscarriage (from the male and female perspective), difficulties at work (being fired/laid off), bullying at school, being a victim of crime (robbery, sexual violence), parental divorce, death of family member and others.

70% of the variation across people in suggestibility can be explained by the different levels of negative life events that they have experienced, the study found.

“We also found that the way people cope with adversity had an impact on their psychological profile,” said Kim.

“The majority of people may learn through repeated exposure to adversity to distrust their own judgment; a person might believe something to be true, but when they, for example, read something in a newspaper that contradicts their opinion, or they talk to someone with a different view-point, that individual is more likely to take on that other person's view.

“This is because the person may have learned to distrust their actions, judgements and decisions due to the fact that the majority of the time their actions have been perceived to invite negative consequences.

“Another example is in relationships. Women, as well as men, can become "brainwashed", and end up changing in their personality, their views and beliefs and in some extreme cases, they may even take on their views and ideas of the world and come to feel incompetent (in their partner’s eyes).”

Kim added that there is already evidence to suggest that there is a relationship between intensity/frequency of negative life impacts and degree of vulnerability. Experience of adversity may have a knock-on effect on a person's mindset- they may come to believe that "they are no good", or "nothing they do is ever good enough”.

In contrast, the findings also suggest that early positive life events may have a protective influence over the effects of subsequent adversity:

“If positive life events predate the negative life events then individuals may be more resilient in terms of, not being so badly affected, psychologically, by the subsequent adverse events. However, issues may arise if the reverse is the case; if the adverse life events precede the positive, those individuals may become, as a result, more susceptible to suggestion and misleading information. Nevertheless, future research will still have to examine this. The order of life events experienced, however, is seemingly important.”

The study found that the parental role is an important one, so education- showing parents functional ways of dealing with their children, meaning that the children will see positive role models, and learn "healthy" skills or ways of dealing with stress/negative life events- may help cultivate a positive mind-set within the child or adolescent which will stay with them throughout life.

Kim said:

“Parents are role-models for their children, and show the children how to cope with stress- if the parents are matter-of-fact about negative occurrences and are "happy-go-lucky" then the kids may emulate that. On the reverse, parents who cope with stress/negative events in a more stressed manner (raging, acting out, drinking, expressing a pessimistic view of the world) this may in turn transfer that way of behaving onto their children.”

The original application of this research was the police interrogation setting, the implications being that people who've experienced a high number of life adversities may be more prone to falsely confessing due to being highly suggestible, possibly resulting in a greater chance of being wrongly convicted.

"However, the notion of suggestibility falls far beyond that of forensic psychology. People may find they are more easily influenced by the media, by TV adverts and so may make life choices as a result that they otherwise would not e.g. they may choose not to vaccinate their children, " said Kim.

Kim's work will be presented at the Festival of Postgraduate Research on Tuesday June 13th in the Charles Wilson Building, University of Leicester. For further information please contact Elizabeth Newall on 0116 223 1775, [email protected], or visit the Festival website at www.le.ac.uk/gradschool/festival.


http://www2.le.ac.uk/ebulletin/news/pres...9962988556
Reply

#2
Thank you xan-i for posting this most interesting article.
Reply

#3
This is a very interesting article. I noticed the comment about "not choosing to vaccinate your children" at the end of the piece. It is curious that she makes a judgement of people who don't vaccinate as being easily swayed, yet with her words seems to be wanting to convince people to follow her own opinion. It would be interesting to know the real purpose of this experiement. I wouldn't be surprised if this is a cover story that is releasing information to the public on mind-control centred topics, presented as new research. Positive/negative imprinting is a central part of forming alters in the matrix.

It did make me think of what my parents imprinted me with - that 'survival' life lessons give you more experience. It is a common theme in our world: that just treading water is more valuable and helpful than having your life flow with ease. A lot of people are jealous of those who get what they want and need so abundantly. This also connects to religious imprinting of money being sinful. Thus we live in a world where allowing all you require to manfiest in your life is a 'selfish' act (which it is in a way), and thus 'bad' (which is opinion).

However, negative experiences can be just as valuable as positive experiences. The key with both is how you approach them, and what you choose to learn from them. Negative always exists. What keeps people in a state of perpetual survival is firstly their victim mentality, and also a world set up to disparage the needs of the masses, in favour of a heirarchical system of control based on reptilian/Illuminati values.

The importance of affirming self and others through positive words and actions is quite clearly proved here. Negations form self-destructive patterns, which in turn breeds a society of robotic individuals who are numb to their own emotionality. Cleansing the old hurts from our mind-patterns is a very powerful form of deprogramming from the current collective consciousness.
Reply

#4
Yes I agree with Monica there!!
Am doing release work in my free time on all these related issues.
Reply

#5
  I believe, but then again i am Gullible!    ;)
Reply

#6
Ultimately, perhaps, it comes down to the seed within. 

One can read with it, through it, between it, or past it.

Regarding the mention of vaccination.  That is probably the crux of the 'statement'.

 
Reply

#7
This is a great article and I wanted to dust off the link...phooooowff. This Thunderwood College doesn't sound like a school of hard knocks at all!

http://thunderwoodcollege.com/
Reply



Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Seven steps to make life easier! nelson 2 1,143 07-16-2014, 06:26 PM
Last Post: Elizabeth

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread:
2 Guest(s)

Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2024 Melroy van den Berg.
This forum uses cookies
This forum makes use of cookies to store your login information if you are registered, and your last visit if you are not. Cookies are small text documents stored on your computer; the cookies set by this forum can only be used on this website and pose no security risk. Cookies on this forum also track the specific topics you have read and when you last read them. Please confirm whether you accept or reject these cookies being set.

A cookie will be stored in your browser regardless of choice to prevent you being asked this question again. You will be able to change your cookie settings at any time using the link in the footer.