TY - JOUR AU - Hablado, Kurt AU - Clark, Mitchell PY - 2020/05/31 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - A State of De-Stress: Examining the Relationship Between Subjective Well-Being, Self-Compassion, and Empathy JF - Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal JA - ASSRJ VL - 7 IS - 5 SE - Articles DO - 10.14738/assrj.75.8298 UR - https://journals.scholarpublishing.org/index.php/ASSRJ/article/view/8298 SP - 412-426 AB - <p>University can be a period of stress caused by academic, social, or personal demands. Yet most are able to rise above the adversity and grow from their experiences. Research on stress has found that a negative association exists with subjective well-being broadly conceptualized as life happiness (Denovan &amp; Macaskill, 2017; Zhang, 2009). There are also positive relationships demonstrated between self-compassion and empathy with subjective well-being (Bluth et al., 2016; Thomas et al., 2007). This study examined the relationship between perceived stress and subjective well-being in a non-clinical university population. The study also examined the relationship between stress and subjective well-being, and how that relationship was moderated by the self-compassion and mediated by empathy.</p> ER -