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Leisure Sciences
An Interdisciplinary Journal
Volume 36, 2014 - Issue 1
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Research Articles

Is Leisure Time Availability Associated with More or Less Severe Daily Stressors? An Examination Using Eight-Day Diary Data

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Pages 35-51 | Received 17 Jul 2012, Accepted 28 Jan 2013, Published online: 16 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

The stress suppressing model proposes that sufficient resources reduce stress. The stress exposure model suggests that certain factors expose individuals to more stress. The current study tested these two models by assessing the within-person lagging effect of leisure time on perceived severity of daily stressors. Analyzing eight-day diary data (N=2,022), we found that having more leisure time than usual on a day reduced perceived severity of daily stressors the next day and that the decrease in severity became larger with further increase in leisure time. Additionally, the effect is much stronger among busy individuals who usually had little leisure time. The findings demonstrated an accelerated suppressing effect that differed between-person, and the lagging effect affords stronger implication for causality than correlational analysis.

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