Associations Between Coping and Suicide Risk Among Emerging Adults of Asian Descent

Afroze N. Shaikh, Man Chen, Jyotsna Dhar, Jackie Yang, Katherine Sadek, Mia Kim Chang, Li-Cih Hsu, Rithika Shilam, Abigail S. Varghese, Catherine Y. Chang

 

Suicide rates have risen among emerging adults of Asian descent, yet limited research has explored risk and protective factors within this population. Grounded in the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide, this study examined the associations between coping orientations (i.e., problem-focused, emotion-focused, and avoidant) and strategies (i.e., gratitude, self-compassion, and search for meaning in life) and suicide risk (i.e., perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness) among emerging adults of Asian descent (N = 429). Multiple linear regression models were used to assess these associations while controlling for relevant demographic variables. Problem-focused coping and gratitude were negatively associated with perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, whereas emotion-focused and avoidant coping were positively associated with perceived burdensomeness. Avoidant coping was also positively associated with thwarted belongingness, whereas self-compassion was negatively associated with thwarted belongingness. These findings underscore the importance of culturally responsive interventions that promote active coping and emotional resilience in addressing perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness and addressing suicide risk factors.

Keywords: suicide risk, emerging adults, Asian, coping orientations, Interpersonal Theory of Suicide

Suicide is the second leading cause of death among emerging adults in the United States (ages 18–29) and emerging adults of Asian descent (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2023). According to the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (Van Orden et al., 2012), thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness are two proximal predictors of desire for suicide. Thwarted belongingness refers to feelings of loneliness and a lack of reciprocally caring relationships, whereas perceived burdensomeness refers to the perception that one is a liability or a burden to others. Among emerging adults of Asian descent, recent anti-Asian rhetoric as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the message that individuals of Asian descent do not belong in the United States and are a burden on society (Keum & Wong, 2023; Litam et al., 2021). Given the heightened vulnerability of emerging adults of Asian descent and compounding stressors because of various life transitions at this developmental stage (Matud et al., 2020), this study explores the associations between coping orientations (e.g., problem-focused, emotion-focused, and avoidant coping), strategies (e.g., practicing gratitude, self-compassion, and the search for meaning in life), perceived burdensomeness, and thwarted belongingness.

Coping Orientations
     Coping, the use of resources to manage stressors, is often studied as a response to one’s environment (Carver, 2019). Scholars identify three overarching coping orientations: problem-focused coping, emotion-focused coping, and avoidant coping (Carver, 1997). Problem-focused coping refers to active efforts to deal with a stressor by attempting to change or eliminate it (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984), such as addressing a conflict or asking for support. Problem-focused coping has been negatively linked to depression (O. D. Chang et al., 2024; C. E. Li et al., 2006), hopelessness (Elliott & Frude, 2001), and suicidal ideation (Clausen et al., 2025). Emerging adults of Asian descent may be more likely to use problem-focused coping strategies in response to external stressors, such as discrimination (Hwang et al., 2023; W. H. Kuo, 1995), because of cultural norms favoring direct advice and solution-seeking
(Wu & Chang, 2019; Yang & Clum, 1994).

Emotion-focused coping strategies, such as journaling or meditation (Baker & Berenbaum, 2007), often focus on managing or processing the emotions that may arise from a situation, as opposed to taking direct action to change the situation (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984). Emotion-focused coping can be both adaptive and maladaptive. For example, emotion-focused coping strategies (e.g., acceptance, social engagement) have been associated with positive mental health outcomes, especially in the face of discrimination (Martinez et al., 2025); however, strategies that involve self-distraction may be less beneficial long term (Perera & Chang, 2015). In addition, collectivism and the concept of the self as part of a larger network provide support for some emotion-focused strategies, such as engagement with community (B. C. H. Kuo, 2013; Yeh et al., 2006).

Lastly, avoidant coping, which involves minimizing, denying, or avoiding dealing with stressors (Roth & Cohen, 1986), is often linked to maladaptive behaviors, such as isolation or substance use (Penley et al., 2002). Among East Asian and South Asian individuals, avoidant coping in response to academic or interpersonal stressors was associated with higher levels of depression (Perera & Chang, 2015). E. C. Chang (2001) found that Asian students were more likely to use avoidant coping and withdraw socially as compared to European American students. Limited research has explored coping orientation and suicide risk among individuals of Asian descent (Y. Li et al., 2024; Zhang et al., 2012). Given the high rates of suicide among this community, more research is needed to understand effective coping strategies as a means of intervention (Fastenau et al., 2024).

Coping Strategies
     Coping is a dynamic process influenced by cultural nuances (E. C. Chang et al., 2006). Each coping orientation, defined as a broad framework through which individuals respond to stress, encompasses a range of specific coping strategies. These strategies are specific behaviors or techniques within coping orientations that are used to manage distress and can be adaptive or maladaptive. Coping strategies serve as cognitive or action-based approaches to temper the effects of an unpleasant situation (American Psychological Association, 2018). Gratitude, self-compassion, and the search for meaning in life are well-documented coping strategies that decrease distress and serve as protective factors against suicide risk (Y. Li et al., 2024; Neff, 2023).

Gratitude
     Gratitude is defined as thankfulness for positive parts of life (Kaniuka et al., 2021) and has been shown to decrease distress from anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms while enhancing positive cognition, prosocial behaviors, and self-concept (Srirangarajan et al., 2020). Among college students in the Southern United States, gratitude decreased suicide risk by fostering positive cognitions, decreasing depression symptomology, increasing perceived social supports, and decreasing maladaptive coping strategies (e.g., substance misuse; Kaniuka et al., 2021). Gratitude has also been linked to increased feelings of belonging in sexual and gender minority adults (Fountain et al., 2021) and decreased suicidal ideation in a multiracial college student sample (Kleiman et al., 2013). However, stress due to holding multiple minoritized identities has been associated with greater feelings of burdensomeness in a sample of American LGBTQ+ adults with a history of suicide attempts (Williams, 2022). Despite these findings, research specifically on emerging adults of Asian descent is limited.

Cross-cultural research indicates that although expressions of gratitude differ between Asian and Western communities, gratitude remains culturally valid and socially normative across diverse populations of Asian descent (Chen et al., 2008; Srirangarajan et al., 2020). In many Japanese and Southeast Asian communities, collectivist orientations, the emphasis on interpersonal harmony, and familial interdependence shape the perception and expression of gratitude differently from other cultural groups (Balthip et al., 2022; Srirangarajan et al., 2020). Yet, differences in outcomes related to gratitude-based coping mechanisms have been documented. Two separate gratitude interventions showcased fewer well-being–related outcomes, including expressions of gratitude toward family and life satisfaction, in participants of Asian descent as compared to their White American counterparts (Srirangarajan et al., 2020). Given these mixed findings and noted cultural and contextual differences, we sought to examine the relationship between gratitude, perceived burdensomeness, and thwarted belongingness among individuals of Asian descent.

Self-Compassion
     Self-compassion, defined as the ability to provide internal support during times of pain and suffering (Neff, 2023), has its origins in Buddhist tradition. Despite variations in its operationalization across cultures, self-compassion consistently contributes to psychological well-being across cultural contexts (Neff et al., 2008). In a multicultural, multigenerational U.S. sample, self-compassion was negatively correlated with suicidal thoughts, behaviors, and nonsuicidal self-injury (Suh & Jeong, 2021). Furthermore, among college students, self-compassion has been negatively associated with suicidal behavior (Kelliher Rabon et al., 2018), thwarted belongingness, and perceived burdensomeness (Umphrey et al., 2021).

The relationship between self-compassion and suicide has also shown promising results for emerging adults of Asian descent. Among Indonesian university students, self-compassion was found to buffer the effects of perceived burdensomeness and reduce the impact of thwarted belongingness on suicidal ideation (Djajadisastra et al., 2025). Umphrey et al. (2021) found that thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness partially mediated the relationship between self-compassion and suicidal ideation among college students. In a Canadian young adult sample with nearly 40% Asian descent participants, results of a brief, online self-compassion intervention showed a decrease in thwarted belongingness (Bianchini & Bodell, 2024). Yet, a follow-up study did not show significant changes in thwarted belongingness or perceived burdensomeness. This study aims to further explore the relationships among self-compassion, thwarted belongingness, and perceived burdensomeness among emerging adults of Asian descent in the United States.

Meaning in Life
     Frankl (1992) argued that finding meaning is central to human existence, achievable through work, love, or care for another being and cultivating courageousness in times of strife (Viktor Frankl Institute for Logotherapy, n.d.). Y. Li et al. (2024) found that for young people ages 10–24, meaning in life was a significant protective factor against suicidal ideation, especially in high-income, individualistic cultures. Kleiman et al. (2013) found that, particularly in the presence of gratitude and grit, meaning in life can serve as a protective factor against suicidal behavior.

The protective role of meaning in life against suicide has also been evident in some Asian contexts. Lew and colleagues (2020) cited meaning in life as a mediating construct between depression, self-derogation, and suicidal ideation in Chinese student samples. For some low-income Filipino youth, meaning in life was a positive coping strategy against structural challenges (Bernardo et al., 2022). Qualitative analyses in a college-aged Asian American sample also found that both having purpose and finding meaning in life served as protective factors against suicidal thoughts (Tran et al., 2015). Still, there remains a dearth of research regarding the search for meaning in life as a coping strategy for Asians in the United States. Thus, we sought to explore this further in the context of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness.

Purpose of the Study
     Given the heightened vulnerability of emerging adults of Asian descent, we examined how coping orientations (i.e., problem-focused coping, emotion-focused coping, and avoidant coping) and strategies (i.e., gratitude, self-compassion, search for meaning in life) relate to suicide risk (i.e., perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness). Based on previous literature, we hypothesized that problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping would be negatively associated with perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, whereas avoidant coping would have a positive association with proximal suicide risk factors. Given the mixed findings related to the relationship between emotion-focused coping and adverse mental health outcomes, we hope to add to the literature by examining this relationship among our population of interest. Regarding coping strategies, we hypothesized that gratitude, self-compassion, and searching for meaning in life would be negatively associated with perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness. The following research questions guided this study: 1) How are coping orientations and strategies associated with perceived burdensomeness among emerging adults of Asian descent? and 2) How are coping orientations and strategies associated with thwarted belongingness among emerging adults of Asian descent?

Methods

Procedures
     Data for this study were obtained from a larger research project assessing suicide risk among adults of Asian descent (N = 578; Hsu et al., 2025; Shaikh et al., 2025). Inclusion criteria included self-identifying as 1) 18 years or older, 2) Asian or Asian American, and 3) currently residing in the United States. Recruitment occurred online via university listservs, social media, and an institutional research management system within a Southeastern urban public university in the United States. Participants were provided with basic information about the project, risks and benefits associated with participation, and a list of national crisis resources. Participants provided electronic consent and confirmation of eligibility via Qualtrics, a web-based survey tool. All study procedures were approved by an academic IRB.

Participants
     From the larger research project, 429 participants met eligibility criteria for this study as emerging adults. Participant ages ranged from 18 to 29 (M = 21.53, SD = 2.05). Participants identified as 52.4% (n = 225) men and 47.6% (n = 204) women. Participants largely identified as heterosexual (n = 392, 91.4%), followed by bisexual (n = 26, 6%). In addition, the majority of participants identified as nonreligious (n = 126, 30.0%), followed by Protestant Christian (n = 91, 21.7%), Muslim (n = 85, 20.2%), and Hindu (n = 48, 11.4%). Participants had low (n = 142, 33.3%), middle (n = 204, 47.9%), and high incomes (n = 80, 18.8%). Participants identified as second generation (i.e., born in the United States of immigrant parents; n = 205, 47.8%), followed by 1.5 generation (i.e., born outside of the U.S. and immigrated as a child or adolescent; n = 95, 22.1%), and first generation (i.e., born outside the United States and immigrated as an adult; n = 52, 12.1%). Participants provided their ethnic identities via an open-ended response, with Indian (n = 75, 17.5%), Chinese (n = 47, 11.0%), Vietnamese (n = 46, 10.7%), and Korean (n = 40, 9.3%) as the most commonly reported ethnic groups. Overall, most participants reported never having attended counseling for more than 30 minutes (n = 311, 73.2%).

Measures
Coping Orientation
     The 28-item Brief-Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory (Brief-COPE; Carver, 1997) was used to measure participants’ coping orientations across three subscales: Problem-Focused Coping (8 items), Emotion-Focused Coping (12 items), and Avoidant Coping (8 items). Items are scored on a 4-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (I haven’t been doing this at all) to 4 (I’ve been doing this a lot). Scores are calculated by averaging the sum of items across each subscale, with greater scores indicating greater engagement in the coping style. Sample items include “I’ve been taking action to try to make the situation better” (Problem-Focused), “I’ve been getting emotional support from others” (Emotion-Focused), and “I’ve been giving up trying to deal with it” (Avoidant). The subscales have yielded Cronbach’s alphas of .79, .74, and .74 (O. D. Chang et al., 2024) for Problem-Focused, Emotion-Focused, and Avoidant Coping, respectively, among U.S. adults. In this study, the subscales had Cronbach’s alphas of .87, .83, and .83 for the Problem-Focused, the Emotion-Focused, and Avoidant Coping subscales, respectively.

Gratitude
     The Gratitude Questionnaire (GQ-6; McCullough et al., 2002) was used to assess gratitude across three dimensions: tendency to recognize gratitude, tendency to respond to gratitude, and tendency to experience gratitude. The questionnaire includes 6 items that are scored on a 7-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree). The scale is scored by reverse-scoring appropriate items and calculating a mean score, with higher scores indicating a stronger sense of gratitude. Sample items include “I have so much in life to be thankful for” and “I am grateful to a wide variety of people.” The scale has yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of .78 among Chinese emerging adults (Lam & Chen, 2021) and Indian young adults (Singh et al., 2014). In this study, the GQ-6 had a Cronbach’s alpha of .79.

Self-Compassion
     The Self-Compassion Scale Short Form (SCS-SF; Raes et al., 2011) was used to measure total self-compassion scores. The scale includes 12 items that are scored on a 5-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (almost never) to 5 (almost always). Scores are calculated by reverse-scoring appropriate items, calculating a mean across each subscale, and computing a total mean score. Higher scores indicate a greater level of self-compassion. Sample items include, “I try to see my failings as part of the human condition” and “When something upsets me I try to keep my emotions in balance.” The scale has yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of .84 among Asian American adults (Mateer et al., 2024). In the current study, the SCS-SF had a Cronbach’s alpha of .71.

Meaning in Life
     The Meaning in Life Questionnaire (MLQ; Steger et al., 2006) was used to assess how participants seek to find meaning and understanding in their lives. The Search for Meaning subscale includes 5 items and is scored on a 7-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (absolutely untrue) to 7 (absolutely true). Scores are calculated by creating a summed score across the items, with higher scores indicating a greater pursuit for meaning in life. Sample items include “I am always looking to find my life’s purpose” and “I am searching for meaning in my life.” The subscale has previously yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of .85 among Chinese university students (Lew et al., 2020). In the current study, the subscale had a Cronbach’s alpha of .84.

Perceived Burdensomeness and Thwarted Belongingness
     The Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire (INQ-15; Van Orden et al., 2012) was used to measure perceived burdensomeness (six items) and thwarted belongingness (nine items). The subscales are scored on a 7-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (not true at all for me) to 7 (very true for me). Scores are calculated by reverse-scoring appropriate items and summing subscale items, with higher scores indicating greater levels of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness. Sample items include “These days, the people in my life would be happier without me” (perceived burdensomeness) and “These days, I feel disconnected from other people” (thwarted belongingness). The subscales have yielded Cronbach’s alphas of .95 for perceived burdensomeness and .72 for thwarted belongingness among Asian American emerging adults (Keum & Wong, 2023). In the current study, the subscales had a Cronbach’s alpha of .97 and .85 for perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, respectively.

Statistical Analysis
     Statistical analyses were conducted in R statistical software (R Core Team, 2024). We ran separate multiple linear regression models to examine the associations between coping orientations and strategies and perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, controlling for demographic variables including age, gender, religion, income, and psychotherapy. The first model investigated the relationship between coping orientations, perceived burdensomeness, and thwarted belongingness after controlling for demographic covariates. In the second model, we added coping strategies and compared the two models.

We investigated the missing data pattern using the mice R package (van Buuren & Groothuis-Oudshoorn, 2011). The proportion of missingness ranged from 0 to 7%, so we implemented multiple imputation by chained equations (mice) in the regression models. Specifically, five imputed datasets were generated, and pooled estimates were calculated using Rubin’s rules. We used the pool.compare function in the mice package for comparing Model 1 and Model 2 for each dependent variable. We checked the regression assumptions with visual inspection and computed heteroscedasticity robust standard errors and confidence intervals using the lmtest R package (Zeileis & Hothorn, 2002) to handle potential violations of homoscedasticity and normality assumptions.

Results

Factors Associated with Perceived Burdensomeness
     Descriptive statistics are provided in Table 1.

 

Table 1

Descriptive Statistics for Study Variables

Variable M SD Min Max Skewness Kurtosis
Perceived burdensomeness 14.54   9.63   6.0 42.0   0.841 −0.437
Thwarted belongingness 28.86 10.45   9.0 55.0 −0.060 −0.746
Problem-focused coping 19.86   5.49   8.0 32.0 −0.127 −0.393
Emotion-focused coping 27.66   7.11 12.0 48.0 −0.167 −0.264
Avoidant coping 15.73   4.99   8.0 32.0   0.568 −0.166
Gratitude   5.26   1.13   1.5   7.0 −0.199 −0.571
Self-compassion   4.07   0.53   2.5   6.0   0.376   1.139
Search for meaning in life 24.93   6.28   5.0  35.0 −0.747 −0.911

 

In Model 1 (Table 2), after controlling for demographic covariates, a statistically significant negative association was identified between problem-focused coping and perceived burdensomeness (b = −0.627, p < .001, 95% CI [−0.849, −0.405]), while significant positive relationships were found between emotion-focused coping and perceived burdensomeness (b = 0.235, p < .05, 95% CI [0.027, 0.443]) and avoidant coping and perceived burdensomeness (b = 0.984, p < .001, 95% CI [0.763, 1.206]). About 34% of the variance in perceived burdensomeness was explained by the coping orientations and demographic covariates. In Model 2, problem-focused (b = −0.267, p < .05, 95% CI [−0.482, −0.052]), emotion-focused (b = 0.210, p < .05, 95% CI [0.011, 0.408]), and avoidant coping (b = 0.637, p < .001, 95% CI [0.409, 0.866]) remained significant predictors of perceived burdensomeness. In addition, gratitude was significantly negatively related to perceived burdensomeness (b = −3.013, p < .05, 95% CI [−3.748, −2.278]), while self-compassion (p = .115) and the search for meaning in life (p = .149) were not statistically significant predictors of perceived burdensomeness. About 45% of the variance in perceived burdensomeness was predicted by the coping strategies, coping orientations, and demographic covariates. A model comparison between Model 1 and Model 2 showed that the addition of coping strategies significantly improved the model fit, F(3, 3652.099) = 20.914, p < .001.

Table 2

Factors Associated With Perceived Burdensomeness

Model 1 Model 2
95% CI 95% CI
Variable Estimate SE Lower Upper Estimate SE Lower Upper
Intercept   10.658* 4.717    1.356   19.959  32.043*** 5.541 21.131 42.955
Age   −0.206 0.190  −0.579     0.166  −0.217 0.165 −0.541   0.106
Woman   −0.399 0.810  −1.994     1.196  −0.323 0.753 −1.804   1.159
Catholic     1.968 1.787  −1.545     5.482    2.737 1.688 −0.582   6.056
Hindu   −0.676 1.728  −4.074     2.723    0.068 1.641 −3.162   3.299
Muslim     0.676 1.628  −2.527     3.879    2.007 1.461 −0.868   4.882
Nonreligious     0.210 1.458  −2.657     3.077    0.067 1.352 −2.592   2.725
Protestant Christian   −1.920 1.564  −4.999     1.158  −0.707 1.438 −3.537   2.123
Low income     1.242 1.207  −1.130     3.615    1.179 1.125 −1.035   3.394
Middle income   −0.199 1.127  −2.415     2.016  −0.213 1.055 −2.288   1.863
Never attended counseling   −1.722 0.919  −3.529     0.085  −1.311 0.842 −2.969   0.347
Problem-focused coping   −0.627*** 0.113  −0.849   −0.405  −0.267* 0.109 −0.482 −0.052
Emotion-focused coping     0.235* 0.106    0.027     0.443    0.210* 0.101   0.011   0.408
Avoidant coping     0.984*** 0.113    0.763     1.206    0.637*** 0.116   0.409   0.866
Gratitude  −3.013* 0.374 −3.748 −2.278
Self-compassion  −1.225 0.774 −2.748   0.298
Search for meaning in life  −0.091 0.063 −0.214   0.033

Note. SE = Standard Error. CI = Confidence Interval. *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001

Factors Associated With Thwarted Belongingness
     In Model 1 (Table 3), after controlling for demographic covariates, a statistically significant negative association was identified between problem-focused coping and thwarted belongingness (b = −0.855, p < .001, 95% CI [−1.109, −0.601]). In contrast, a significant positive relationship was found between avoidant coping and thwarted belongingness (b = 0.917, p < .001, 95% CI [0.681, 1.152]). About 28% of the variance in thwarted belongingness was explained by the coping orientations and demographic covariates. In Model 2, problem-focused coping (b = −0.319, p < .05, 95% CI [−0.582, −0.056]) and avoidant coping (b = 0.387, p < .01, 95% CI [0.152, 0.621]) remained significant predictors. Moreover, both gratitude (b = −4.235, p < .001, 95% CI [−5.070, −3.399]) and self-compassion (b = −3.690, p < .001, 95% CI [−5.258, −2.121]) were significantly negatively associated with thwarted belongingness. About 48% of the variance in thwarted belongingness was predicted by the coping strategies, coping orientations, and demographic covariates. A model comparison between Model 1 and Model 2 showed that the addition of coping strategies significantly improved the model fit, F(3, 5028.87) = 43.010, p < .001.

Table 3

Factors Associated with Thwarted Belongingness

Model 1 Model 2
95% CI 95% CI
Variable Estimate SE Lower Upper Estimate SE Lower Upper
Intercept   34.389*** 5.577 23.419 45.359  67.698*** 5.402 57.068 78.328
Age   −0.064 0.228 −0.513   0.385  −0.108 0.180 −0.464   0.248
Woman   −0.864 0.912 −2.657   0.929  −1.102 0.757 −2.589   0.386
Catholic   −2.608 2.323 −7.180   1.964  −1.138 1.946 −4.968   2.692
Hindu   −0.565 2.295 −5.077   3.947    0.608 1.968 −3.265   4.481
Muslim   −2.242 2.114 −6.399   1.914    0.201 1.725 −3.191   3.593
Nonreligious     0.490 2.100 −3.640   4.620    0.927 1.717 −2.450   4.304
Protestant Christian     0.178 2.215 −4.180   4.536    1.947 1.882 −1.760   5.653
Low income     0.780 1.251 −1.681   3.240    0.425 1.047 −1.633   2.484
Middle income     0.566 1.199 −1.794   2.926    0.461 1.032 −1.568   2.490
Never attended counseling   −1.961 1.068 −4.061   0.139  −0.839 0.914 −2.637   0.958
Problem-focused coping   −0.855*** 0.129 −1.109 −0.601  −0.319* 0.133 −0.582 −0.056
Emotion-focused coping     0.016 0.121 −0.222   0.254  −0.075 0.108 −0.288   0.138
Avoidant coping     0.917*** 0.119   0.681   1.152    0.387** 0.119 0.152   0.621
Gratitude  −4.235*** 0.425 −5.070 −3.399
Self-compassion  −3.69*** 0.798 −5.258 −2.121
Search for meaning in life    0.132 0.067  0.000   0.264

Note. SE = Standard Error. CI = Confidence Interval. *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001

Discussion

The purpose of this study was to examine associations between coping orientations and strategies and proximal suicide risk factors, specifically perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, among emerging adults of Asian descent. Problem-focused coping was negatively associated with both perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness. Specifically, active efforts to seek solutions and address stressors may reduce feelings of burdensomeness and social disconnection. This finding aligns with prior research suggesting that active problem-solving reduces stressors, fosters a sense of control, and enhances interpersonal connections (Y. Li et al., 2024). These results highlight the importance of culturally responsive interventions that strengthen active coping strategies. Problem-focused coping has been identified as a preferred coping strategy for emerging adults of Asian descent (Hwang et al., 2023), and encouraging these active coping strategies serves as a protective factor by mitigating the proximal suicide risk factors such as perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, ultimately supporting psychological resilience among this population.

Conversely, emotion-focused and avoidant coping were positively associated with perceived burdensomeness. As individuals increased efforts to mitigate the emotional consequences of a stressor, they may have also increasingly perceived themselves as burdensome to others. Congruent with the cultural norms and values of collectivist cultures, this behavior emphasizes the internalization and regulation of personal emotions to foster social and interpersonal harmony. Within such cultural contexts, traditions and values may normalize the suppression of processing emotions in order to maintain a sense of harmony (Litam et al., 2021; Sue et al., 2019), which may result in increased feelings of self-blame and liability to others. Similarly, avoidant coping was positively associated with thwarted belongingness, underscoring the maladaptive role of this coping orientation. These findings are consistent with prior research among college students that highlighted how dependence on maladaptive coping behaviors elevated the intensity of association between various types of stress and suicidal ideation (Hussain & Hill, 2023).

Practicing gratitude was negatively associated with both perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness, underscoring the importance of fostering gratitude among individuals of Asian descent. Gratitude may promote a positive reframing of life circumstances and strengthen social bonds, thereby reducing feelings of burden and enhancing belongingness. A meta-analysis of studies assessing the impacts of mindfulness interventions on well-being (e.g., Kirca et al., 2023) highlighted the positive impact of gratitude interventions on well-being. Despite gratitude’s negative association with perceived burdensomeness, it is essential to note that expressions and experiences of gratitude may differ by individual and cultural group. Corona et al. (2020) examined gratitude and its link to well-being across Latinos and East Asians and found that the two collectivist cultures varied in their expressions and experiences of the construct.

Self-compassion was negatively associated with thwarted belongingness but not perceived burdensomeness. These findings suggest that self-compassion may reduce loneliness and enhance a sense of belonging yet may not directly impact feelings of burdensomeness among emerging adults of Asian descent. This underscores the need to support individuals in engaging in self-compassion exercises to strengthen one’s sense of connection and well-being (Liu et al., 2020). This pattern is consistent with prior studies showing that self-compassion fosters social connectedness and compassion for others (Neff & Germer, 2013).

Contrary to previous reports (e.g., Y. Li et al., 2024), the search for meaning in life did not significantly predict perceived burdensomeness or thwarted belongingness in our sample. These findings may highlight the complexity of emerging adulthood, which includes challenges such as identity exploration and changes to one’s education, career, and relationships (Arnett, 2011). Among emerging adults of Asian descent, these challenges may be further complicated in the process of navigating bicultural expectations, including familial obligations (Cheung & Swank, 2019). Furthermore, the search for meaning in life may constitute a more individualistic exploration that conflicts with collectivistic values emphasizing relational harmony and interdependence (Steger et al., 2008), thus limiting its relationship with proximal suicide risk factors at this stage of life.

Implications for Professional Counselors
     The findings of this study have significant implications for professional counselors, particularly in the design and implementation of culturally sensitive interventions to address suicide risk among emerging adults of Asian descent. The positive association between problem-solving coping and lower levels of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness highlights the importance of encouraging active, action-oriented coping strategies in counseling. Problem-solving approaches, such as structured planning and solution-seeking behaviors, can empower clients of Asian descent to address stressors effectively and in a culturally congruent manner. Within the counseling session, this may manifest as working with a client to develop a plan to address feelings of thwarted belongingness, such as identifying targeted ways to seek social support. In addition, counselors may consider implementing interventions to support client self-efficacy and use of problem-focused coping. For example, scholars have suggested the use of mindfulness training as a resource to increase problem-focused coping among students (Halland et al., 2015). When supporting clients navigating experiences of racial trauma and oppression, counselors may particularly benefit from situating problem-focused coping strategies within the radical healing framework and engaging in strategies that promote critical consciousness development, resistance, and the cultivation of radical hope (French et al., 2020).

Furthermore, emotion-focused and avoidant coping may exacerbate suicide risk factors for this population. Professional counselors will want to carefully assess clients’ reliance on emotion-focused or avoidant coping orientations and provide psychoeducation on the potential risks associated with maladaptive approaches in relation to suicide risk factors. Counseling interventions should allow for clients to identify adaptive coping orientations that align with their cultural values while promoting emotional processing and interpersonal connections. Among clients of Asian descent, this process may include discussing indirect forms of coping, such as saving face, or protecting one’s image and honor in interpersonal contexts. Concern for losing face has been linked to experiences of depressive symptoms (Kong et al., 2020) and diminished help-seeking attitudes (Leong et al., 2011), which may further exacerbate levels of suffering, isolation, and feelings of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness.

As gratitude was negatively associated with both thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness, professional counselors can encourage clients of Asian descent to engage in gratitude exercises, such as meditation, prayer, and journaling. Practicing such exercises during counseling sessions, as well as encouraging these exercises outside of sessions, can support clients in feeling less like a burden and more connected to others (Diniz et al., 2023; Komase et al., 2021). When encouraging gratitude exercises, it is important to consider that emotion-focused coping was positively associated with perceived burdensomeness. Therefore, gratitude practices should be designed to emphasize interpersonal connection and belonging while intentionally de-emphasizing themes that could inadvertently reinforce feelings of being a burden. Tailoring these exercises to focus on relational appreciation and mutual support may be especially beneficial for emerging adults of Asian descent navigating collectivistic values.

Self-compassion was also negatively associated with thwarted belongingness, further emphasizing the importance of interventions that promote self-kindness and shared humanity during challenging times. Self-compassion exercises encourage individuals to view their struggles as a part of a common human experience rather than isolating events, thereby enhancing feelings of connection and reducing loneliness (Neff, 2011). Professional counselors can consider supporting clients of Asian descent to normalize imperfections and magnifying efforts they are taking to navigate adversities rather than providing praise (e.g., “You are doing great!”; “Excellent job of pushing through!”). Unlike praise, which uses evaluative language, encouragement focuses on the individual’s efforts and encourages steps they are taking (e.g., “You are working really hard.” and “That is challenging, and you are trying.”). Such approaches are more likely to support clients’ development of a growth mindset, empowering their ability to embrace mistakes as part of learning (Dweck, 2007). Moreover, professional counselors can engage in interventions to promote increased perspective-taking andcompassion toward oneself. Potential interventions include role play exercises, asking them what they might tell a friend going through their situation, maintaining a self-compassion journal, and taking time to process engaging in such exercises (Neff, n.d.). It is important to note that, given the diversity among individuals of Asian origin, the efficacy of self-compassion interventions may vary across Asian cultures. Supporting this notion, Neff and colleagues (2008) conducted a cross-cultural study of college students from three countries and found that Thai students reported the highest levels of self-compassion, Taiwanese students reported the lowest, and American students reported intermediate levels. These findings highlight the need to consider within-group cultural differences when developing and implementing self-compassion interventions.

Interestingly, given that the search for meaning in life was not significantly associated with suicide risk in this population, interventions focusing solely on meaning in life may not be sufficient for emerging adults of Asian descent. Professional counselors should consider integrating meaning in life–related strategies into broader frameworks that address other factors, such as gratitude and self-compassion. For example, professional counselors may incorporate meaning-making activities that align with cultural values, such as the use of personal storytelling (Wang et al., 2015), while also pairing this coping strategy with a problem-focused coping orientation or gratitude exercises.

Beyond the therapeutic space, professional counselors and counselor educators may benefit from leveraging these findings to recognize the unique needs of students of Asian descent in the classroom and within academic spaces. For example, this process may involve the integration of anti-oppressive problem-focused coping strategies in advising and mentoring relationships, reminders to engage in self-compassion within the training sequence, and inclusive encouragement. In turn, these strategies may help to decrease thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness in counseling trainees and students of Asian descent, an already marginalized group within counselor education (Shaikh et al., 2024).

Limitations and Future Directions
     Although convenience sampling facilitated the recruitment of our target population, it may introduce bias. Specifically, online recruitment and data collection required internet and technological access, potentially limiting the sample’s representation. Additionally, individuals of Asian descent are not a homogenous group, and although our study included an intentionally diverse sample, the sample size was insufficient for subgroup comparisons. Future studies may consider exploring specific sociocultural differences (e.g., ethnicity, race, religious orientation, immigration status, social class) to understand within-group differences. Furthermore, given that our study utilized self-reported measures, future research may include other-report or behavioral measures to help triangulate our findings, such as recruiting participants’ family members. Finally, our study was a cross-sectional study, which does not allow us to make causal or directional claims. Future studies may consider using longitudinal or experimental designs to further explore particular mechanisms of suicidality and protective factors in the Asian diaspora.

Conclusion

Asians are the fastest-growing ethnoracial group in America (Vaishnav & Labh, 2023). Although suicide rates for emerging adults of Asian descent have increased (Bui & Lau, 2024), research on culturally specific risk factors and supports protecting against suicide risk is limited. Guided by the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide, we examined the associations between coping orientations and strategies and perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness. Problem-focused coping and gratitude were negatively associated with perceived burdensomeness, whereas avoidant and emotion-focused coping orientations demonstrated positive associations with perceived burdensomeness. Similarly, problem-focused coping, gratitude, and self-compassion were negatively associated with thwarted belongingness, whereas avoidant coping was positively associated with thwarted belongingness. These findings highlight the need for counseling interventions that integrate these coping orientations and strategies in order to address proximal suicide risk factors among emerging adults of Asian descent.

 

Conflict of Interest and Funding Disclosure
The authors reported no conflict of interest
or funding contributions for the development
of this manuscript.

 

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Afroze N. Shaikh, PhD, NCC, BC-TMH, LPC, is an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin and was a 2022 Mental Health Counseling Doctoral Fellow with the NBCCF Minority Fellowship Program. Man Chen, PhD, is an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin. Jyotsna Dhar, MA, LPC, is a doctoral student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and was a 2022 Mental Health Counseling Master’s Fellow with the NBCCF Minority Fellowship Program. Jackie Yang, MA, is a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas at Austin. Katherine Sadek, MEd, is a graduate student at the University of Texas at Austin. Mia Kim Chang, PhD, EdM, NCC, is a part-time instructor at Georgia State University. Li-Cih Hsu, MS, is a doctoral intern at Vanderbilt University. Rithika Shilam is an independent researcher. Abigail S. Varghese, BS, is a doctoral student at the University of Texas at Austin. Catherine Y. Chang, PhD, NCC, LPC, CPCS, is a professor at Georgia State University. Correspondence may be addressed to Afroze Shaikh, 1912 Speedway, Stop D5000, Austin, TX 78712-1139, afroze.shaikh@austin.utexas.edu.

Counseling Emerging Adults: A Phenomenological Investigation of Professional Counselors’ Lived Experiences

Matthew L. Nice, Arsh, Rachel A. Dingfelder, Nathan D. Faris, Jean K. Albert, Michael B. Sickels

Emerging adults (18–29 years) are at a vulnerable developmental stage for mental health issues. The counseling field has been slow to adapt to the evolving landscape of the specific needs of emerging adult clients. The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the experiences of professional counselors who primarily counsel emerging adult clients. Using interpretative phenomenological analysis, data was collected from 11 professional counselors to produce four major themes of their experiences working with emerging adult clients: parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment. The findings from this study provide insights regarding practices and preparation for professional counselors to work with emerging adult clients.

Keywords: emerging adults, professional counselors, experiences, phenomenological, qualitative study 

Emerging adulthood (18–29 years) is a distinct human developmental stage between adolescence and adulthood. Arnett (2000) defined emerging adulthood after interviewing hundreds of young adults around the United States about their developmental experiences over several years. It is a period of life that is both theoretically and empirically different than late adolescence and early adulthood due to the psychosocial factors that young adults experience during this time in their lives (Lane, 2020). It is a time when individuals often leave their parents’ or guardians’ home, enter college or begin a career, seek romantic relationships, and begin to make decisions independently (Arnett, 2004). Emerging adults no longer experience the restrictions from their parents/guardians or teachers and they are not yet burdened with normative adult responsibilities. These freedoms allow individuals to develop qualities (e.g., self-sufficiency, new adult roles, major responsibilities) that are required during adulthood (Arnett, 2004).

As a result of this shift in human development, individuals in their twenties are marrying and starting families later, changing jobs more frequently, and pursuing higher levels of education than they were in previous decades (Arnett, 2015). Thus, the developmental factors and needs of this age group have been increasingly shifting. Although emerging adulthood is the most well-studied theory of young adult development, it is not without limitations. The most notable of these is the applicability of emerging adulthood features to young adults in all contexts. For example, the college experience offers young adults new opportunities to explore their identities and to try new things that non–college-going young adults may not experience (Mitchell & Syed, 2015). Additionally, emerging adulthood may be a Western-centric experience that young adults in other parts of the world may not experience in the same way (Hendry & Kloep, 2010).

Emerging adulthood is distinguished by its five defining features: identity exploration, sense of possibilities, self-focus, instability, and feeling in-between (Arnett, 2004, 2015). These features indicate normative developmental affordances and challenges, as well as help to define the common experiences of emerging adulthood (Nelson, 2021; Nice & Joseph, 2023). Identity exploration refers to emerging adults’ process of self-discovery in education, careers, and romantic partnerships. Sense of possibilities refers to emerging adults’ tendency to look to the future optimistically, imagining the many avenues they may take in their lives. Self-focus, not to be confused with selfishness, is the normative process in which emerging adults have the opportunity to focus on themselves without parental constraints, and before the responsibilities of marriage or parenthood. Feeling in-between is the developmental limbo between adolescence and adulthood, when emerging adults do not identify as an adolescent or an adult. Lastly, instability refers to emerging adults experiencing unstable and frequently changing life conditions, such as change in romantic partnerships, transitioning to and from college, or moving in and out of living situations (Arnett, 2015).

Experiencing these normative developmental features often results in challenges to emerging adults’ mental health (Arnett et al., 2014; Lane, 2015a; Lane et al., 2017). Navigating identity exploration and new possibilities by experimenting with anomalous life roles and experiences may lead to distress and failure (Lane, 2015b). The subjective experience of not feeling salient in adulthood but being tasked with new adult responsibilities that were not present in adolescence may cause periods of identity crisis and various psychological difficulties (Lane et al., 2017; Weiss et al., 2012). The various transitions such as entering and leaving college, starting and ending careers, or moving out of the house of a parent/guardian and moving in with roommates or living alone may contribute to instabilities and significant distress (Murphy et al., 2010; Nice & Joseph, 2023). Additionally, the salience of emerging adults’ cultural identities affects the ways in which they experience satisfaction with their lives (Nice, 2024). Although not every emerging adult will experience all of these difficulties (Buhl, 2007), many will respond with significant distress that may affect the critical juncture in mental health development that occurs during the emerging adulthood years (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2022; Lane, 2015a). The mental health needs of emerging adults is often overlooked, as society may only see the opportunities for new growth, fun, freedom, and promise of being a young adult, and may overlook the instabilities and distress that accompany this developmental period (C. Smith et al., 2011).

Although emerging adults are some of the most vulnerable of the age groups for developing mental health issues (Cheng et al., 2015), including being particularly prone to anxiety and depression (American College Health Association, 2019), the counseling field has been slow to adapt to the evolving landscape of these individuals. Many counselors are challenged with using outdated developmental models to conceptualize their work with emerging adult clients that do not adequately address the nuances within this age group (Lane, 2015a). During high school years, school counselors are often tasked with prioritizing students for college and career readiness, but not for their upcoming transition into emerging adults (Nice et al., 2023). Given these circumstances, counselors who work with emerging adult clients are uniquely positioned to foster resilience, wellness, and navigation of various challenges during this often tumultuous stage of human development (Lane, 2015a). Understanding the experiences of professional counselors who work primarily with emerging adult clients may be necessary to assess the unique needs and support that emerging adult clients can benefit from in the counseling setting. Although other studies have examined the lived experiences of counselors working with specific clients (e.g., Wanzer et al., 2021) and other phenomena (Coll et al., 2019), no studies have examined counselors’ experiences working with emerging adults.

Given that there is little systematic research exploring how counselors experience working with emerging adult clients, qualitative research is a warranted methodological approach to understanding these social phenomena. Conceptualizing this study using the theoretical lens of emerging adulthood (Arnett, 2000, 2004, 2015) and its five features can assist in exploring the experiences of counseling emerging adults through a developmental perspective that accounts for the current circumstances of young adults. The present research addresses this by investigating the following research question: What are the perspectives and experiences of professional counselors working with emerging adult clients?

Method

The present qualitative study used interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) by collecting data through semi-structured interviews. The IPA approach was selected as the methodology for this study in order to reveal the experiences of counselors working with emerging adult clients because it permits an abundant level of data collection and interpretation and allows for consideration of participant accounts within a broader context/theory (Hays & Singh, 2023). During the interviews, participants were given the opportunity to discuss their experiences of working with emerging adult clients in order to give voice to their thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes surrounding these experiences.

Research Team and Reflexivity
     The research team consisted of the first author and principal investigator, Matthew L. Nice; four research assistants, Arsh, Rachel A. Dingfelder, Nathan D. Faris, and Jean K. Albert; and an external auditor, Michael B. Sickels. Nice holds a PhD in counselor education and supervision and has studied and worked with emerging adults in various settings. Albert is a doctoral student in a counselor education and supervision program who has worked with emerging adults in a clinical setting. Arsh, Dingfelder, and Faris were master’s students at the time of this study who were enrolled in a clinical mental health counseling program and who indicated interest in counseling emerging adults after graduation. Arsh and Faris identified as emerging adults. Sickels served as the external auditor and is a counselor educator who holds a PhD in counselor education and supervision and has several years of clinical experience counseling emerging adult clients. Nice pursued this study as part of a research agenda that includes emerging adulthood mental health. Arsh, Dingfelder, Faris, and Albert were research assistants who worked on this study because they had communicated interest in collaborating on this topic and as part of their paid graduate assistantships. Both prior to and throughout the study, these research assistants were trained on the qualitative research process, conducting qualitative interviews, and data analysis.

We engaged in bracketing to minimize the ways in which our experiences, expectations, or any potential biases might influence the study. We discussed our experiences in relation to being or having been an emerging adult, our roles as scholars who have researched emerging adults and clinicians who have counseled emerging adults, and our overall commitment to the counseling profession. During these discussions we identified our experiences, acknowledged any biases that we may have had, and talked about ways to bracket while conducting interviews. We kept analytic memos and personal notes during the data collection and coding process. Sickels examined our reflexivity in relation to data collection and coding to provide us with critical feedback.

Participants
     This study consisted of a purposive criteria sample of 11 professional counselors who met the following criteria: graduation from a CACREP-accredited counseling program, a minimum of 2 years of professional counseling experience post-graduation, and a full-time caseload of at least 60% or more emerging adults (ages 18–29) during their time as a professional counselor. Demographic data for each participant are displayed in Table 1. Pseudonyms are used for each counselor selected for the study to maintain confidentiality (American Counseling Association [ACA], 2014), along with their age, gender, race/ethnicity, highest counseling degree, years of experience as a counselor, and the type of work setting. We chose to require 2 years of counseling experience as inclusion criteria given that most states require no less than 2 years of experience to become a fully licensed professional counselor (e.g., Pennsylvania Department of State, 2024), which is a benchmark of demonstrating experience as a professional counselor. We chose not to require that participants hold licensure as a professional counselor, as we hoped to include college counselors in our study, many of whom may not seek licensure as a professional counselor, as many universities do not require counselors to hold licensure to work in counseling centers. We elected to require a full-time caseload of at least 60% of clients currently within the ages of 18–29 years to ensure that the experiences of the counselors working with this age group were substantial enough to provide generalizability.

Table 1
Participant Demographics

Pseudonym Age Gender Race/Ethnicity Education Total years as a professional counselor Type of practice
Judy 30 Female White MA 5 Private practice
Lorraine 31 Female White PhD 8 Private practice
Peter 48 Male White MA 10 College counseling center
Claire 40 Female White MA 16 Private practice
Christine 30 Female White MA 5 College counseling center
Patricia 48 Female White MA 20 College counseling center
Mark 32 Male White PhD 7 College counseling center
Theresa 30 Female White MA 5 Outpatient practice agency
Emily 39 Female White MA 2 College counseling center
Stephen 37 Male Asian MA 7 Community mental health
Sarah 27 Female Hispanic MA 3.5 Outpatient agency & private practice

Note. N = 11.

Procedures and Data Collection
     After we obtained university Institutional Review Board approval, participants were invited to participate through convenience sampling from agencies, private practices, and university counseling centers in the northeast region of the United States. We also searched online counselor directories for counselors who fit the criteria of our study. Upon completing interviews, we also recruited participants via snowball sampling by asking initial participants for recommendations for new potential participants to interview who also met our inclusion criteria. Given that many college counselors’ clients are almost all within the emerging adult age range, they served as valuable participants in our data collection. However, these counselors only see clients in the college context and do not see non-college emerging adult clients, an important and often forgotten population of emerging adults (Nice & Joseph, 2023). To assure the study focused on professional counselors, we limited our participants who worked in college counseling centers to account for less than half of our total participants (n = 5).

Interview questions were developed by the research team by first examining the extant counseling and young and emerging adulthood literature. Nice developed questions grounded by the literature and sent the questions to the research team for their suggestions, additions, and edits. The interview questions approved by the research team were sent to Sickels, who provided feedback for creating the final interview protocol. Prior to interviews, participants signed a consent form and completed a demographics questionnaire. Participants were also provided with a document outlining the five features of emerging adulthood (Arnett, 2004, 2015) that they were asked to review prior to the interview in order to better understand and answer the interview questions pertaining to these features. We conducted semi-structured interviews lasting approximately 60 minutes via Zoom over an 8-month span. Participants were offered a $20 electronic gift card as an incentive for participation. At the start of each interview, participants were reminded that questions pertaining to their clients only pertained to their emerging adult–aged clients, within the years of 18 to 29, and not any clients outside of that age range. Each interview consisted of eight open-ended questions (see Table 2). Participants were also asked follow-up questions for clarification. These questions were guided by Arnett’s (2000) theory of emerging adulthood, a well-studied and accepted understanding of the developmental markers and features that individuals experience during young adult development.

To understand participants’ experiences of counseling young adults during this developmental phase, we asked several questions pertaining to their experience of their clients’ developmental features of emerging adulthood (i.e., identity exploration, sense of possibilities, self-focus, instability, and feeling in-between) in counseling sessions. For consistency across participants, we asked each interview question in the same order during each interview (Creswell & Creswell, 2017). The pace of each interview was determined by the participant to allow for the development of richer data (Hays & Singh, 2023), with impromptu questions asked between established questions when elaboration was needed.

Table 2
Interview Questions

Question Number Question Content
1 What is your process for working with emerging adult clients?
1a Why do you choose to work with this population?
2 What developmental considerations do you make when working with emerging adult clients?
2a Can you provide an example or case using developmental considerations working with emerging adult clients?
3 To what extent does clients’ “identity exploration” factor into your counseling of emerging adult clients?
4 To what extent does clients’ “sense of possibilities” factor into your counseling of emerging adult clients?
5 To what extent does clients’ “feeling in-between” factor into your counseling of emerging adult clients?
6 To what extent does clients’ “instability” factor into your counseling of emerging adult clients?
7 To what extent does clients’ “self-focus” factor into your counseling of emerging adult clients?
8 When you look back on the process of counseling emerging adults, what other thoughts stand out which we have not discussed about the outcomes of counseling emerging adult clients?
8a How have those implications affected the outcome of the counseling process with emerging adult clients?
8b How did you respond to these outcomes as a counselor?

 

To enhance the trustworthiness, credibility, dependability, confirmability, and transferability of the data, we enlisted several procedures during data collection (Morrow, 2005; Prosek & Gibson, 2021). Field notes, researcher observations, and experiences pertaining to each interview were expressed and processed during research team meetings, which assisted in triangulation of data by confirming interpretations of interview data (Anney, 2015). Nice used member checking by sending each participant documents that outlined summaries of the emergent findings, quotes, themes, and data (Flynn & Korcuska, 2018). Of the 11 participants, 10 responded to member checking by confirming the accuracy of the documents to the best of their knowledge or suggesting new thoughts or ideas regarding the documents. To establish the confirmability of findings, analytic memos and a reflexivity journal were used to assist with objectivity in the interpretations during data analysis (Saldaña, 2021). Analytic memos were also kept to record thoughts around the meaning behind participants’ statements.

Nice used a reflexivity journal throughout the interviews and data analysis processes and made efforts to bracket assumptions as a professional in the counseling field (Hays & Singh, 2023). The purposive sampling method of clients based on their experiences of counseling emerging adults assisted in establishing transferability of the findings of the study (Anney, 2015). The trustworthiness and dependability of the study was assisted using an external auditor and peer briefer. Sickels served as the auditor throughout the study, reviewing interview transcripts, data collection, data analysis, themes, and overall processes, procedures, and coherence of the study (Flynn & Korcuska, 2018; Hays & Singh, 2023). Nice and Sickels met face-to-face or by phone to engage in peer-debriefing during all major points of the study, including Nice’s positionality, thoughts, emotions, and reactions to the procedures of the study.

Data Analysis
     Data was analyzed by following Pietkiewicz and Smith’s (2014) guidelines of data analysis. The process involves three stages: immersion, transformation, and connection. This process began with Nice listening to recordings of each interview to review the content as a whole and to mark any additional observations. Nice and the research team manually transcribed each interview. All transcribed interviews were reviewed by Nice concurrently with recordings to ensure accuracy of the transcripts and to create a deeper immersion into the data. During this process any new insights or observations were recorded in field notes and a reflexivity journal (Pietkiewicz & Smith, 2014). The rest of the research team also engaged in this three-stage process by reviewing each team member’s recordings and processing them in team meetings. Research team members participated in consensus coding team meetings after every two or three interviews, resulting in a total of five meetings. Prior to meetings team members all examined the materials for coding and submitted them to Nice. During meetings Nice led the discussions about each participant interview and the research team discussed how and why they arrived at specific codes. Intercoder reliability was maintained by Sickels, who examined each initial coding from all research members as well as the coding results from consensus coding meetings (Cofie et al., 2022).

Following IPA qualitative methodology, Nice and the research team reviewed and interpreted their notes regarding the transcripts in order to transform them into emergent themes using both hand coding and ATLAS.ti coding software (J. A. Smith, 2024). These initial themes were linked together by their conceptual similarities, which developed a thematic hierarchy (Pietkiewicz & Smith, 2014). Finally, Nice and the research team created a narrative account of each theme, which included direct quotes from the participants. The interpretations of these emergent themes and the overall interview content were reviewed by Nice and the research team in order to reach agreement on the final, distinct themes. Afterward, Sickels conducted an independent cross-analysis on the interview transcripts, notes, and emergent and final themes to ensure the accuracy and clarity of the final themes.

Results

     The data analysis process using IPA qualitative methods resulted in four distinct themes. These themes were identified and designated based on the meaning related with professional counselors’ experiences working with emerging adult clients. It should be noted that anxiety/stress was initially considered as a fifth theme; however, further coding and team meetings concluded that anxiety/stress is grounded within the other four themes and was not an independent distinct theme. Hence, the following four phenomenological themes emerged: parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment. The results of this interpretative phenomenological study are outlined in the following section.

Theme 1: Parental Pressures
     This theme indicates the expectations, criticisms, and imposed beliefs that emerging adult clients often process in the counseling session. Participants expressed that much of their experiences counseling emerging adult clients involved working on their clients’ relationship with their parents. Within this theme, participants expressed that their clients struggle with meeting their parents’ expectations, criticisms, standards, and imposed beliefs. Sarah shared:

A lot of people, whether they had good or bad relationships with their families, are learning how that looks now in their adulthood, like how they incorporate their family. So like creating more boundaries and what not, boundaries is a huge thing for this.

     Mark asserted: “Parents are always into the stuff [emerging adult clients] are doing and criticizing it, saying ‘no, do this or that instead.’ I think it pushes them into feeling like they are still this adolescent or kid.” Additionally, Stephen mentioned: “Clients might be going through, let’s say, gender identity. There’s this rejection of themselves from their parents when they were younger, and they struggle exploring who they want to be, because they were never fully accepted by their parents.” Participants largely expressed that although their emerging adult clients are adults, their parents still have a profound effect on them and what they bring to counseling sessions. Counselors experiencing their clients navigating their parental relationships is likely due to the individuation process (Youniss & Smollar, 1985). Individuation is an age-normative co-constructed process occurring in emerging adulthood in which young adults redefine their relationship with their parents after transitioning into emerging adulthood (Zupančič & Kavčič, 2014). This process often involves young adults’ fear of disappointing, seeking approval, and navigating parent intrusiveness (Nice & Joseph, 2023).

Theme 2: Self-Discovery
     The theme self-discovery refers to counselors’ experiences of assisting emerging adult clients in finding who they are, how they fit into society, and their exploration of being an adult. Judy expressed:

I just recognize that there’s a really great impact for folks during these [emerging adult] years to explore themselves and really get to know who they are, but in a space that feels comfortable and accepting. And, hey, however, you want to show up to session, you know that the counselor there has got your back.

     Similarly, Emily stated: “You know [emerging adult clients] are trying these identities possibilities on for size, you know, I could be this! What would that feel like? What would that be like?” Claire also had similar experiences working with emerging adult clients. She expressed:

Finding who they are is probably the biggest type of stress that I see [as a professional counselor]. What does it mean to be by myself? What does it mean to be outside of a family? What does it mean to be alone and not alone? But you know just kind of out there in the world.

     This theme likely speaks to the features of emerging adulthood, namely identity exploration and instability (Arnett, 2000, 2004). Exploring identities can be a stressful time for young adults, especially when some identities are marginalized (Pender et al., 2023). Participants expressed the importance of being a stable and safe place for clients as they explore who they are, who they want to be, and their place in society.

Theme 3: Transitions
     This theme highlights the worry and indecisiveness emerging adult clients struggle with as they transition to their new roles. Based on their experiences focusing on the transitions of emerging adult clients in therapy, participants identified and articulated the stressors and challenges to mental health experienced by clients facing frequent transitions. To this point, Theresa noted:

So there’s a lot of transitions that are happening within young adulthood that I find really helpful to not only manage within therapy, but just to help clients better understand themselves. It’s such a pivotal time to really test out the way in which they’re experiencing the world.

     Judy also experienced how transitions can be difficult with some of her emerging adult clients. She shared: “I had some [emerging adult clients] who have not had a traumatic background, but the instability and chaos of all these changes and transitions really threw them for a loop.” Christine noted some specific transitions she sees in her emerging adult clients:

There’s a lot of like hopping around with sort of short timelines, especially if they’re not living at home. Their room, their dorm, their apartment, whatever it is, is changing every year. A lot of students are transferring in or transferring to other schools. Their jobs are changing. They’re getting internships. Their classes are different every semester. And so the entire emerging adult experience is pretty much based on some level of instability with transitions . . . that plays into the work that I do, because I’m trying to give them a place that is stable and consistent, and somewhere that they can go and feel safe and comfortable.

     The frequent transitions and changes that occur in emerging adulthood often lead to instability and distress (Howard et al., 2010). Participants noted these transitions, their role in assisting clients with these transitions during emerging adulthood, and the importance of the counseling session providing clients with stability that they may not be receiving in other areas of their lives.

Theme 4: Dating and Attachment
     This theme signifies the instability of romantic relationships and learning healthy attachment styles that emerging adult clients bring to the counseling session. When discussing some of the most prevalent concerns emerging adult clients bring to counseling sessions, Lorraine indicated:

Dating is an interesting time in early adulthood. So I pay attention to that and I spend a lot of time on psychoeducation, paying attention to healthy, unhealthy attachment styles, unhealthy and healthy relationship characteristics, and what people would identify as like red flags. And then going into attachment styles and how they’re attaching to others is serving them or not serving them.

     On that note, Christine discussed a specific emerging adult client she is working with:

Someone I’m working with now is going through a breakup. She was with the same person for the past 3 years, and it recently ended. And so, a lot of the work that we’re doing now is processing who she is apart from the relationship and doing so in a way that feels safe for her.

Mark identified similar experiences working with emerging adult clients:

[Emerging adult clients say] “my dating relationships are nonexistent. So now I feel that I don’t have any worth because I know I can’t take somebody out on a date or go to the movies or whatever.” So I think that plays a huge role because it’s almost like something that clients that I work with experience. . . . like everything is just not stable.

     Dating and navigating romantic relationships in therapy has been widely researched in counseling scholarship (Feiring et al., 2018). Exploring these concepts with emerging adults in therapy may be especially crucial given that emerging adulthood is the formative stage in which individuals explore romantic relationships (Shulman & Connolly, 2013). Participants indicated that they process healthy and unhealthy attachment styles with clients as they navigate dating, which may be significant given the effects of emerging adults’ attachment styles on their overall mental health (Riva Crugnola et al., 2021).

Discussion

     Eleven professional counselors provided insight into their experiences and perceptions working with emerging adult clients in this study. Four phenomenological themes—parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment—were derived from participants’ perspectives. These findings support the available literature on the mental health needs of emerging adults (e.g., Cheng et al., 2015; Lane, 2015a) and extend this knowledge with increased direction.

The results of this study supported Arnett’s (2000, 2004, 2015) theory of emerging adulthood. Participants reported that their clients experience stress and anxiety from age-normative developmental experiences. The transitions and dating stress that emerging adults process in counseling can be linked to the emerging adulthood feature of instability (Arnett, 2004). The stress of self-discovery that is present in emerging adults’ counseling sessions is related to the emerging adulthood features of identity exploration, sense of possibilities, self-focus, and feeling in-between (Arnett, 2004). The parental pressure that counselors expressed are often prevalent when counseling emerging adults is consistent with individuation in emerging adulthood (Youniss & Smollar, 1985). Komidar and colleagues (2016) found that emerging adults often experience both a fear of disappointing their parents and feelings of parental intrusiveness in their lives while traversing the individuation process of redefining the parent–child relationship during emerging adulthood. The parental pressures that emerging adults process in counseling sessions is likely due to emerging adults individuating by establishing their own independence while sustaining a healthy level of connectedness with their parents (Nice & Joseph, 2023).

Participants’ experiences of their emerging adult clients expressing issues related to pressures from their parents stem from many contexts. These pressures came from parents exerting their expectations for their emerging adult children to choose specific education and careers and to perform well in them. Although emerging adults have newly entered adulthood and can explore their own belief systems, counselors still experienced their emerging adult clients feeling pressured to conform to the beliefs that their parents imposed on them. Emerging adult clients who were not meeting the specific expectations of their parents often expressed stress and anxiety from criticisms they received from their parents. These experiences are not to be confused with poor parenting. Mark reported that many parents are “helicopter parents” (Padilla-Walker & Nelson, 2012) who are overly involved in their emerging adult children’s lives; this increased involvement often results in their children experiencing stress and pressures.

The self-discovery that participants experienced their emerging adult clients undergoing was related to emerging adults not only determining who they are, but who they want to be. Given that individuals may not feel comfortable exploring their identities in the high school setting (Palkki & Caldwell, 2018), emerging adulthood may serve as a safer time for young adults to explore who they are. Discovering who they are is a formative task that is often met with much stress and instability (Arnett, 2004). Participants found that emerging adult clients often experience stress and anxiety about learning what they want in terms of careers, jobs, family roles, and communities.

Several participants used the word “scared” when describing how their emerging adult clients express their feelings about the many transitions they experience. Counselors noted that their emerging adult clients are facing many transitions, such as entering and leaving college, entering and leaving jobs, moving out of their parents’ home, moving in with roommates or romantic partners, and changing friend groups. With these transitions, counselors reported that their clients expressed a level of indecisiveness in knowing if they are following the correct path. Many of these transitions come with an increased level of new independence that counselors noted their clients had difficulty navigating. In line with prior research (Leipold et al., 2019), counselors expressed that promoting resilience and fostering coping methods during these transitions is beneficial to establishing consistency, safety, and security for emerging adults in counseling sessions.

Internet dating applications have led to emerging adults being more aware of the characteristics and criteria for who they want to date (Sprecher et al., 2019). Participants expressed that emerging adults often feel distress from the ending of relationships, conflicts with romantic partners, navigating who they want to date, and traversing internet dating applications. Several participants mentioned that their emerging adult clients’ self-worth was tied to their relationship status or who they are in a relationship. Participants reported that their clients’ attachment styles often lead to issues in dating. Participants noted that in their experiences, psychoeducation about healthy dating and attachment is often necessary to assist clients with these issues in the counseling session.

Implications for Counselor Practice and Training
     The findings from this study provide valuable insights regarding counselors’ clinical experiences with emerging adult clients with several practice implications. Professional counselors can benefit from understanding the roles that emerging adults’ parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment have on their mental health. Counselors can benefit from asking about these four themes during the beginning of the counseling relationship to build rapport and immediately assist emerging adult clients with common developmental issues experienced by these clients.

To assist emerging adult clients with negative feelings regarding parental pressures, counselors can offer clients the opportunity to bring their parent(s) to therapy. Marriage and family counselors can also intentionally address and process parental pressures in applicable family systems. Attending to emerging adult clients’ issues surrounding self-discovery has potential implications for multicultural and social justice counseling (Ratts et al., 2016). For example, emerging adult clients who identify as gender diverse or as a sexual minority may be discovering themselves in new ways that can elicit transprejudice, discrimination, and stigmatization in society (Wanzer et al., 2021). Utilizing the Multicultural and Social Justice Counseling Competencies (MSJCCs; Ratts et al., 2016) in the counseling session provides a framework for emerging adults who are discovering and exploring their cultural identities (Nice, 2024). Counselors can use the MSJCCs to understand emerging adults’ specific intersections of their identities (e.g., race/ethnicity, sexual identity, gender identity, spirituality).

Counselors can assist clients with feelings of distress regarding self-discovery, identity, and fitting in by normalizing these developmental experiences and processing their values and life desires. Regarding transitions, counselors should be intentional to assure that the counseling session is a safe and stable environment for emerging adult clients. Given the stress and instability during emerging adulthood from frequently changing contexts in college, jobs, families, friends, romantic partnerships, and living situations, assuring that the counseling session remains stable and safe can provide clients with a sense of ease and security that they may be lacking in other areas of their lives.

Addressing dating and attachment in emerging adulthood can prove to be a difficult task, as some emerging adults may be seeking monogamous relationships while others may be more interested in hooking up or casual, no-strings-attached sexual encounters that are increasingly common during emerging adulthood (Stinson, 2010). Meeting clients where they are in terms of dating can be beneficial to supporting them in their specific needs. Given the relationship between dating and self-worth (Park et al., 2011), counselors may benefit from counseling modalities such as cognitive behavioral therapy to assist clients with cognitive distortions and feelings surrounding dating and their worth. Regarding attachment, counselors can consider using attachment theory (Bowlby, 1969) with emerging adult clients struggling with their attachment types in romantic relationships.

Lastly, findings demonstrated that counselors encounter unique developmental issues when counseling emerging adult clients. It may be beneficial for counselors to be instructed on these unique needs of emerging adult clients during their counselor education programs, given the vulnerability of this age group to mental health difficulties, and the needs that participants reported (Cheng et al., 2015). Counselor educators can implement case studies surrounding emerging adult clients struggling with parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment to prepare them for real-world scenarios that they are likely to encounter while working with this population. Information on Erikson’s (1968) stages of development, specifically aspects of identity achievement versus role confusion, can align with instruction on emerging adulthood. Counselor educators should also acknowledge that the majority of counselors-in-training may be within the emerging adulthood age range and consider developmental implications for these students during instruction and mentorship (Nice & Branthoover, 2024). The Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP; 2023) standards highlight lifespan development as a foundational counseling curriculum, with lifespan development standards addressing: “1. theories of individual and family development across the lifespan” and “7. models of resilience, optimal development, and wellness in individuals and families across the lifespan.” Counselor education should include training on the unique developmental needs and issues of emerging adulthood such as the themes found within this study in order to assist in meeting these standards.

Limitations and Future Research
     Given the subjective nature of qualitative research, we implemented multiple measures of trustworthiness to account for our influence and positionality on this study. Regardless, our influence should still be considered a limitation of this study (Hays et al., 2016). Although we limited the total number of professional counselors working in college counseling centers to less than half of the total sample (n = 5), those participants only experienced emerging adults within the college context and could not speak to experiences of counseling emerging adults who have never attended college, an understudied population of young adults (Seiffge-Krenke et al., 2013). The semi-structured interviews were grounded in emerging adulthood theory and asked specifically about the five features of emerging adulthood. These questions may have influenced participants’ thoughts and feelings about their experiences with this population and affected the overall findings of the study. Finally, some members of our research team were master’s students who did not have doctoral-level research design and qualitative research classes or training. To combat this limitation, several steps were taken to assure the research team members were appropriately trained for their participation in this study, such as online trainings, training from Nice, reflexivity journals, and numerous research team meetings between interviews.

The findings from the present study suggest future investigation concerning the practices for counseling emerging adults is warranted. Whereas this study provides a distinct contribution to the professional counseling and emerging adulthood literature, studies can use these findings to explore future methods for counseling emerging adults. Given that the present study is a phenomenological examination of counselors’ experiences of counseling emerging adults, future studies should use a grounded theory methodology to generate the best practices for working with emerging adults in therapy. Interviews from both professional counselors and emerging adults currently in counseling would assist in providing a complete perspective of the needs for emerging adults in therapy.

Quantitatively, the four themes from this study can be examined in relation to stress, anxiety, wellness, and life satisfaction in order to understand the levels of distress these factors have on the mental health of emerging adults. For example, survey research seeking to understand emerging adults’ levels of stress and wellness can include the Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale (Busby et al., 1995) and the Short Version of the Individuation Test for Emerging Adults (Komidar et al., 2016) to examine dating and attachment (i.e., Theme 4) and parental relationships and pressures (i.e., Theme 1) in relation to stress and wellness scales.

Conclusion

Counseling with emerging adult clients presents professional counselors with a unique task that includes important developmental implications to address. Consistent with emerging adulthood theory (Arnett, 2000, 2004), counselors experienced their emerging adult clients demonstrating high levels of stress and anxiety from developmental phenomena exclusive to this age range. Specifically, counselors experienced their emerging adults consistently bringing issues to counseling sessions related to parental pressures, self-discovery, transitions, and dating and attachment. Applying these insights derived from professional counselors’ experiences of counseling emerging adult clients in clinical settings and counselor education training programs can support counselors to better serve the specific needs of this frequently served population and, consequently, better address the mental health of emerging adults in therapy.

Conflict of Interest and Funding Disclosure
The authors reported no conflict of interest
or funding contributions for the development
of this manuscript.

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Matthew L. Nice, PhD, is an assistant professor at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Arsh, MA, is a doctoral student at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Rachel A. Dingfelder, MA, is a professional counselor and a graduate of the clinical mental health counseling program at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Nathan D. Faris, MA, is a professional counselor and a graduate of the clinical mental health counseling program at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Jean K. Albert, MA, is a doctoral student at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Michael B. Sickels, PhD, is a clinical assistant professor at Duquesne University. Correspondence may be addressed to Matthew L. Nice, 400 Penn Center Boulevard, Building 4, Suite 900, Indiana University of Pennsylvania Pittsburgh East, Pittsburgh, PA 15235, Mnice@iup.edu.