A Comparative Study of Cross Gender Identified Males and Females on Coping Strategies, Emotion Regulation Strategies and Defense Mechanisms
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Abstract
Gender is the fundamental reality of our biology which impacts our psychology. Gender Identity
is typically a focal part of a person‟s sense of self as a male or a female that is the inner
experiences of having a place with one sexual orientation. There are various strategies (coping,
emotion regulation and defense mechanisms) and therapeutic techniques used in problematic
situations that differentiate male from female or masculinity from femininity as they use
different strategies and techniques. The present investigation was conducted to examine the
relationship among coping strategies, emotion regulation strategies and defense mechanisms in
cross gender identified males and females. It was hypothesized that masculine female used more
of confrontive coping, self-controlling, cognitive reappraisal and projection and feminine male
used more of distancing, expressive suppression and denial (coping, emotion regulation
strategies and defense mechanisms) respectively. In order to verify the above hypotheses a
sample of one hundred (N=100) students, from which fifty were males (N=50) and fifty were
females (N=50) taken in the present study. To measure the Gender Identity, Coping Strategies,
Emotion Regulation Strategies and Defense Mechanisms; the Masculine Gender Identity (MGI)
for females and Feminine Gender Identity (FGI) for males developed by Blanchard and
Blanchard (1987), ways of coping questionnaire by Folkman and Lazarus (1988), Emotion
Regulation Questionnaire by Gross and John (2003) and the Thematic Apperception Test by
Murray (1943) was administered respectively. The data were subjected to correlation, regression
and „t‟ analysis and the major finding of the study reveals that masculine female used more of
confrontive coping, self-controlling, cognitive reappraisal and projection and feminine male used
more of distancing, expressive suppression and denial (coping, emotion regulation strategies and
defense mechanisms) respectively.
