
Some national pride goes beyond flying a flag or cheering at the Olympics. It runs on a quieter, more brittle conviction that one’s country is exceptional, perhaps even the greatest, and that the rest of the world stubbornly refuses to admit it. Psychologists have a name for that mindset: national narcissism.
While national narcissism appears to be a comfort for many of its adherents, according to a new study that tracked hundreds of young adults over time, holding it was linked to higher stress down the road.
Researchers long assumed the relationship ran in one direction. People who feel bad about themselves, the thinking went, grab onto an inflated sense of national pride like an emotional life raft, with stress, depression, and a bruised sense of self-worth pushing them toward grand beliefs about their nation. Research published in the Journal of Research in Personality complicates that story.
Rather than emotional pain feeding national narcissism, the data points the predictive arrow the other way, and the relief people might hope to get from the mindset does not seem to arrive, at least within the window the study covered.
That twist matters because so much public commentary treats wounded pride as the cause and grievance as the symptom. These findings flip the order, at least for young adults: the belief appears to come first, and the stress follows.
Inside the National Narcissism Study
A team based in the Czech Republic and Poland followed 688 Czech young adults between the ages of 18 and 30 across two survey rounds set roughly a year apart. Most participants were women, and the group ran the gamut from full-time students to working adults and people outside the workforce. Participants answered questions about their national pride, stress levels, depressive feelings, and personality, including a measure of how emotionally reactive they tend to be in general.
To gauge national narcissism, participants rated how strongly they agreed with statements capturing the idea that their nation deserves far more recognition than it gets, scored on a scale from one to four. Stress was measured by asking how often, over the past month, someone felt unable to control important things in life. Depression was screened with two questions about feeling down or losing interest in activities. Researchers then leaned on a statistical method that tracks how one trait at an earlier point predicts another later on, which let them untangle the direction of the links.
With nearly 700 participants, the sample was large enough to catch even modest relationships between the variables. Researchers also controlled for each person’s general tendency toward negative moods, so the results would not simply reflect the fact that some people are gloomier by nature.
National Narcissism Came First, Stress Followed
Only one predictive link surfaced in the analysis: national narcissism in the first round predicted higher stress by the second. Neither stress nor depressive symptoms predicted stronger national narcissism later on. That pattern held whether participants were in their late teens or their late twenties, and it did not shift across the status measures the researchers tested, including education, employment, and financial strain.
Going in, the team expected that people in lower-status spots, younger participants or those with thinner financial cushions, might show a tighter link between emotional distress and national narcissism, since they arguably have more to gain by hitching their self-worth to national identity. That expectation did not pan out. Results looked much the same across the board.
There was one more wrinkle. Stress and depressive symptoms both tracked closely with a person’s baseline tendency toward negative moods, as expected. National narcissism behaved differently: it was not tied to that emotional baseline in the same way, which hints that the belief is not just another expression of a gloomy disposition.
An Endless Chase for Recognition
Why would believing a nation is secretly great breed stress rather than ease it? Drawing on a psychological framework about how people react when their self-worth feels threatened, the authors describe national narcissism as a chase with no finish line. Someone who draws importance from a nation’s supposed greatness stays exposed to a steady drip of threats: foreign criticism, unflattering news coverage, political setbacks, or simply the sense that the world is shortchanging their country. Living in that state of constant vigilance, the authors argue, wears a person down.
They also flag that national narcissism predicted stress but not depressive symptoms over the year studied. One reading is that the puffed-up self-image these beliefs carry may shield people from low mood in the short run, even as the endless hunger for outside validation keeps stress simmering. Another possibility the authors raise is that the heavier emotional toll may need longer than a year to show itself.
Source : https://studyfinds.com/national-narcissism-linked-rising-stress-young-adults/

