Mental health, not social support, mediates the forgiveness-alcohol outcome relationship. (1/10)

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Forgiveness and relationship satisfaction: mediating mechanisms. (2/10)

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Beyond positive psychology? Toward a contextual view of psychological processes and well-being. (3/10)

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Forgiveness and the bottle: promoting self-forgiveness in individuals who abuse alcohol. (4/10)

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Forgiveness of others and health: do race and neighborhood matter? (5/10)

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Combating school bullying through developmental guidance for positive youth development and promoting harmonious school culture. (6/10)

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"Explicitly implicit": examining the importance of physician nonverbal involvement during error disclosures. (7/10)

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Forgiveness as a moderator of the association between victimization and suicidal ideation. (8/10)

The present study examined the relationships between victimization, suicidal ideation and forgiveness. 962 Chinese middle school students were evaluated using the Chinese versions of the Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire (OBVQ), the Positive and Negative Suicide Ideation scale (PANSI) and the Forgiveness Questionnaire (FQ). High victimization and low forgiveness were found to predict increased suicidal ideation. Victimized students with high level of forgiveness reported less suicidal ideation than students with low level of forgiveness. Forgiveness was found to moderate the association between victimization and suicidal ideation and could be a protective factor against suicidal ideation in victimized students.  (+info)