Hurtful Events and Forgiveness among Ghanaian Couples
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Hurt is an inevitable aspect of couples’ relationships that can pose perceived threats,
influencing appraisal processes and forgiveness. This dyadic, cross-sectional study employed a
convergent parallel mixed-methods design to investigate the types of hurtful events couples
encounter and the impact of hurt and negative appraisals on forgiveness among 102 couples within
the Tema Metropolitan Assembly, aged 24 to 73 (M = 38.79, SD = 9.35). In the first part,
participants described hurtful events experienced in their relationships using a prompt, which were
analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Results revealed ten (10) typologies of hurtful events:
(1) active disassociation; (2) passive disassociation; (3) infidelity, (4) disrespect, (5) violence, (6)
humiliation, (7) criticism, (8) deception, (9) neglect of duty, and (10) insecurity. In the second part,
participants completed questionnaires measuring the impact of hurt, negative affect, and
forgiveness. Quantitative analyses using Pearson correlations, MANOVA, Multilevel Analysis
(Actor Partner Intercept Model- APIM), and Hierarchical regression analysis tested hypotheses
regarding the influence of demographic factors such as age and relationship length on the impact
of hurt, religious differences in forgiveness, and associations between hurt impact, negative
appraisals, and forgiveness. Results indicated that age and relationship length showed non
significant trends toward reducing the impact of hurt and negative appraisals, while religious
affiliation did not significantly affect decisional or emotional forgiveness. Importantly, higher
levels of hurt impact were significantly associated with increased negative appraisals and
decreased forgiveness within couples. Religious homogamy moderated the relationship between
negative appraisals and forgiveness, highlighting the cultural distinctiveness of forgiveness
processes among Ghanaian couples.
Description
MPhil. Counseling Psychology
