Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
This paper applies Affect Control Theory of Self (ACT-S) to understand how support groups facilitate recovery after divorce and bereavement. Drawing on qualitative analysis of participant interviews and group transcripts, it identifies seven mechanisms that shape changes in self-evaluation, self-potency, and self-activation. Across both contexts, healing occurred through reciprocal compassion, skillful coping, and opportunities for empowered action that recalibrated depleted self-sentiments. In contrast, stigmatizing or prescriptive interactions produced deflection and emotional withdrawal. The analysis reconciles Francis’s (1997) claim that ideological reframing supplies new high-EPA identities with Nelson’s (2006) finding that behavioral change precedes identity change: participants first enacted compassionate or agentic behaviors that made reframed identities feel authentic. These findings demonstrate how ACT can illuminate the micro-mechanisms of identity realignment, showing that recovery from loss involves not just new meanings but the restoration of worth, competence, and vitality through enacted compassion and agency.