Abstract

This study aims to verify that the focusing manners of athletes with post-traumatic growth experience through direct and indirect trauma events directly affect the balanced time perspective deviation, and whether resilience indirectly affects it. In the results of this study, it was found that the focusing manner of athletes with post-traumatic growth experience had a negative effect on the balanced time perspective deviation. In addition, it was found that resilience had a negative mediating effect on the effect of focusing manner on the balanced time perspective deviation. Through these results, it is necessary to develop a psychological training program that improves the level of focusing manner and resilience so that athletes can live a positive life through a balanced time perspective because the direct and indirect post-traumatic growth experiences of athletes affect the focusing manner and the balance time perspective deviation. In this study, athletes with post-traumatic growth experience were selected through the group classification method of Huseman et al.(1987), so there is a limitation in that the focusing manner of athletes with post-traumatic growth experience did not produce detailed results on resilience and the influence of balanced time perspective deviation. Therefore, in future studies, it is necessary to conduct a study that classifies the degree of post-traumatic growth experience in order to understand information to efficiently control the balanced time perspective deviation of athletes.

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