Vancouver Sun

Can keeping secrets affect well-being?

It depends on finding a non-judgmental person to disclose what it is you’re harbouring, Linda Blair writes.

-

Almost everyone has a secret or two. Some, such as a surprise party you’re planning for a friend, are enjoyable.

Others, however, may make you feel distressed because you believe disclosure would be upsetting to significan­t others, or cause other people to dislike you. But is there a long-term cost to keeping distressin­g secrets?

Anita Kelly, professor of psychology at the University of Notre Dame, has spent years studying the effects. Her research shows that individual­s who keep personal secrets are more likely to experience negative psychologi­cal symptoms such as anxiety, guilt and shame.

Ahmet Uysal and colleagues at the Middle East Technical University asked subjects to keep a daily record of self-concealmen­t and to rate their level of wellbeing. They found that concealing distressin­g personal informatio­n was associated with negative well-being.

Catrina Finkenauer and Bernard Rime at the University of Louvain discovered that those who kept what they felt were important but unhappy secrets about themselves not only experience­d lower levels of well-being, but were also less healthy physically. But what happens if you decide to disclose your secret? Walid Afifi and John Caughlin at the University of California, Santa Barbara followed 342 participan­ts who were keeping a secret for two months. They found that those who offloaded their secret to someone who did not condemn them began to experience higher levels of self-esteem.

Robert Rodriguez and Anita Kelly asked 87 participan­ts to imagine telling their secret either to an accepting or a critical individual. Those who imagined confessing to an accepting person reported lower rates of physical illness eight weeks later.

The evidence is clear. If you’re harbouring a burdensome secret, you’ll experience greater wellbeing if you talk it through with someone who doesn’t judge you. How do you find such a person?

First and foremost, choose someone who is “outside” the secret. Choose someone who will listen calmly and objectivel­y, who can help you work through what you need to do next. Good choices are your family doctor, a therapist or a counsellor.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO ?? If you have a secret, you’ll have greater well-being if you talk it through with someone who doesn’t judge you.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO If you have a secret, you’ll have greater well-being if you talk it through with someone who doesn’t judge you.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada