Abstract
Data from a variety of research areas are reviewed consistent with the hypothesis that attention to inner feelings and bodily changes increases awareness of and potency of distress and the prevalence of reported symptoms. The paper focuses on adolescence, a life-stage characterized by increased self-awareness and dramatic physical maturation. Increased introspectiveness is associated among many adolescents with more psychological pain and symptom reporting. It is hypothesized that discontinuities in family life and school and peer experiences, a major subclass of stressors, exacerbate self-awareness while stability and successful coping protect against painful self-perceptions.

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