Exploring the phenomenological structure of existential anxiety as lived through transformative life experiences

Anxiety Stress Coping. 2022 Mar;35(2):232-247. doi: 10.1080/10615806.2021.1921162. Epub 2021 May 3.

Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study is to offer a systematic phenomenological approach to explore existential anxiety, typically defined as the experience of becoming aware of the universal concerns including death, meaninglessness, freedom and loneliness. It focuses on in-depth exploration of Transformative Life Experiences (TLE), events which often induce radical and profound reorganization of one's life.

Method: Data was collected through in-depth interviews with 150 adults who self-identified and accounted for a TLE in their lives. Data analysis was guided by a hermeneutic phenomenology paradigm that postulates that people account for their experience within the four lifeworld existentials of temporality, spatiality, corporality (embodiment), and relationality.

Results: A heuristic model was developed as an attempt to bridge the gap between the theoretical notion of existential anxiety and how it is subjectively experienced by interviewees.

Conclusions: Implications of the model for further research and practice are discussed, particularly the ability to identify a dominant universal concern, even when implicit, based on an exploration of one's subjective account of TLE.

Keywords: Existential anxiety; hermeneutic phenomenology; transformative life experiences; universal concerns.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Anxiety
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Existentialism*
  • Humans
  • Life Change Events*