The Meaning-Making Model: Crystal Park's Empirical Framework for 'Why Me?'

The Meaning-Making Model: Crystal Park's Empirical Framework for 'Why Me?'

'Why me?' That question itself is the starting point of meaning-making. While Frankl left clinical-philosophical insight, Crystal L. Park at the University of Connecticut refined it into a testable cognitive-psychology model. Her 2010 *Psychological Bulletin* integrative review (5,000+ citations) shows how the discrepancy between 'global meaning' and 'situational meaning' is resolved through two pathways — assimilation and accommodation. A broader, more empirical map than PTG or Frankl.

TL;DR

Park 2010 model: discrepancy between global meaning (world beliefs, goals, purpose) and situational meaning (meaning of this event) creates stress, resolved via assimilation (fit event to beliefs) or accommodation (revise beliefs to fit event). Updegraff 2008 showed post-9/11 meaning-making predicted lower distress. Davis 1998 distinguished 'finding' vs 'making' meaning. But self-blame is also meaning-making — not always adaptive.

The Cognitive Structure of 'Why Me?'

A cancer patient, a bereaved parent, a suddenly laid-off worker — they almost invariably ask the same question: 'Why me?' This isn't mere complaint. It's the unmistakable starting signal of a cognitive process that psychologists have modeled for thirty years: meaning making.

If Viktor Frankl (#293) gave us the clinical-philosophical insight of meaning in 1946, Crystal L. Park at the University of Connecticut refined that intuition into a testable cognitive model. Frankl is a poet; Park is a surveyor.

Her 2010 Psychological Bulletin paper 'Making sense of the meaning literature' synthesized over 200 empirical studies into an integrative framework and now has 5,000+ citations. It is the single standard map for the meaning-research field.

Two Levels: Global vs Situational Meaning

Park's core: meaning operates on two levels.

Global meaning is the broad belief system through which one interprets the world. Three components:

  • Beliefs: Is the world just, benevolent, controllable? Are people trustworthy?
  • Goals: What matters — family, achievement, faith, freedom?
  • Sense of purpose: Is my life connected to something larger?

Situational meaning is the concrete appraisal — 'what does this event mean?' The same cancer diagnosis becomes 'a chance to audit my life' for one person and 'a meaningless cosmic assault' for another.

Discrepancy Triggers Meaning-Making

Park's key insight: stress arises not from the event itself but from the discrepancy it creates with one's global meaning.

When someone who holds 'the world is just' suffers innocent harm, a fissure opens. The mental work of closing that fissure is meaning-making.

This traces directly to Ronnie Janoff-Bulman's 1992 Shattered Assumptions: Towards a New Psychology of Trauma, which argued trauma shatters three core assumptions: 'the world is benevolent, meaningful, and I am worthy.' Park reframed these 'shattered assumptions' as the more general discrepancy between global and situational meaning. Shelley Taylor's 1983 cognitive adaptation theory is another precursor.

Two Pathways: Assimilation vs Accommodation

Borrowing from Piaget, Park names two resolution paths.

Aspect Assimilation Accommodation
Definition Re-appraise event to fit existing global beliefs Revise global beliefs to integrate the event
Example trigger 'This accident was God's will / a test of my soul' 'The world is less just than I believed'
Mental change Beliefs preserved, event's meaning revised Beliefs updated, event accepted as-is
Risk if failed Obsessive rationalization, denial, self-blame Nihilism, chronic anxiety, identity collapse

Both are normal, varying by event and disposition. Religiously oriented people tend toward assimilation; secular thinkers toward accommodation (Park 2005). Neither is 'correct' — Park's model is descriptive, not prescriptive.

'Meaning Made' Predicts Adjustment — Empirical Evidence

Park's model produced measurable outcome variables. 'Meaning-making attempts' and 'meaning made' are measured separately, and the latter consistently predicts adjustment.

  • Updegraff, Silver & Holman 2008 in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology tracked a national US sample (N≈1,300) for two years after 9/11. Respondents who reported having 'made meaning' of the event showed significantly lower PTSD and general distress. Those who only 'tried' to make meaning fared worse.
  • Park et al. 2008 longitudinal cancer-patient research showed meaning-made patients had lower depression and higher post-traumatic growth.
  • Davis, Nolen-Hoeksema & Larson 1998 JPSP studied the bereaved and separated two constructs: 'meaning seeking' (causal understanding of why) vs 'benefit finding' (value-reconstruction of what was gained). At 12 months, those who reported having 'found meaning' adjusted well, but those still 'searching for meaning' at 13 months showed higher distress.
  • Park & George 2013 meta-analysis reports small-to-medium effect sizes for meaning-making and adjustment (r ≈ 0.20–0.35) — not a magic spell, but a consistent signal.

How It Differs from Frankl and PTG

Untangle confusions:

  • Frankl's logotherapy (#293) is a prescriptive, clinical-philosophical stance: humans are meaning-seekers, and meaning is discoverable.
  • Post-traumatic growth (PTG, #286), per Tedeschi & Calhoun, is a specific positive outcome — change in five domains (self, relationships, priorities, spirituality, possibilities).
  • Park's meaning-making model is broader and descriptive. It explains the cognitive process regardless of whether the outcome is positive, negative, adaptive, or maladaptive. PTG sits inside Park's model as one case of well-resolved accommodation.

The Dark Side: Maladaptive Meaning-Making

Park has cautioned against using her model as a glib 'meaning is good' prescription. Meaning-making is not always adaptive.

  • Self-blame: 'If only I hadn't driven that day.' A meaning-making attempt that restores a sense of control, but when chronic it worsens depression and PTSD (Park 2010).
  • Obsessive meaning-seeking: as Davis 1998 showed, still 'searching' at 13 months signals rumination.
  • Cultural variation: the importance of meaning-making is itself culturally bound. Comparative studies (e.g., Park & Halifax 2011) suggest East and South Asian samples experience lower pressure for explicit meaning-articulation than Western samples. The assumption that all sorrow must be 'understood' may itself be Western.

Korean Context: Religiosity, Collective Tragedy, Cultural Meaning

Korea is fertile ground for meaning-making research.

Jang Jung-ju (2008, Korean Journal of Psychology) studied Korean undergraduates and emphasized separating meaning-seeking from meaning-found. Meaning-seeking alone correlated positively with depression — mirroring Davis 1998 in a Korean sample.

Korean trauma psychology research (Cho Yong-rae 2017 and colleagues) followed Sewol-ferry bereaved families' meaning processes. Many remained in accommodation, integrating the new global belief that 'the world is not safe,' while some built new purpose through social activism (meaning made through purpose). Im Seung-jin (2023) and related Itaewon-disaster studies record similar assimilation/accommodation forks.

Korean census and Gallup-Korea data show roughly half of Korean adults hold a religion. Religious assimilation ('God's providence,' 'karma,' 'fate') is therefore a very common Korean meaning pattern. Clinicians should not mistake it for denial — within Park's framework, religious assimilation is a legitimate pathway that may be adaptive inside the person's global system.

Conclusion: Meaning Is a Process, Not a Prescription

The most important lesson of Park's model is paradoxical: do not force meaning. Meaning-making is a naturally occurring cognitive process with individual timetables, and whether assimilation or accommodation, it must cohere with the person's own global system.

The clinician's task is not to inject meaning but to hold space where someone can safely sit with their discrepancy. The same for a good friend, a good counselor. Meaning is not a prescription; it is what becomes possible only inside the time of tolerated discrepancy.

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Frequently asked questions

How does Park's model differ from Frankl's logotherapy?

Frankl (#293) is a **clinical-philosophical, prescriptive** stance — 'humans seek meaning; meaning is discoverable.' Park's 2010 model accepts that intuition but breaks the question of *how* meaning is made into measurable cognitive stages — discrepancy between global and situational meaning → assimilation or accommodation → meaning made or failed. Frankl writes a prescription; Park draws a map. They are complementary, not competing.

How does PTG connect to meaning-making?

PTG (#286) sits within Park's model as one outcome of **successful accommodation**. When an event shakes prior global beliefs and the person updates them, integrating new self-perception, relationships, priorities, spirituality, and possibilities, that's PTG. But not all meaning-making leads to PTG — assimilation-resolved cases and negative-accommodation cases (e.g., chronic mistrust) are also meaning-making. PTG is a subset of Park's model.

People keep telling me to 'find meaning' and it makes things worse. Why?

Because of Davis, Nolen-Hoeksema & Larson 1998's key finding: bereaved people still 'searching for meaning' at 13 months had *greater* distress. **'Meaning made'** is adaptive; **'meaning still being sought'** resembles rumination. External pressure intensifies the latter. Also, Park & Halifax 2011-type comparative studies suggest the pressure to articulate meaning explicitly is itself culturally bound — not every sorrow needs to be 'understood.'

How does meaning-making apply to a parent who lost a child?

Losing a child is the event where Janoff-Bulman's 'shattered assumptions' operate most fiercely — 'world is benevolent, just, my child is safe' all collapse. Park's model recognizes two paths. **Religious assimilation** ('God took them') gives some parents peace but isn't available to all. **Accommodation** is longer and more painful, yet some reach meaning-made via new purpose (child-safety advocacy etc.; Korean Sewol-bereaved studies — Cho 2017). Key: do not force fast meaning; honor the difference between 'seeking' and 'making'; recognize both religious and secular paths as legitimate.

What does it mean that self-blame is a form of meaning-making?

To preserve the global belief that 'the world is controllable,' people often take the assimilation route: 'I could have controlled this → it's my fault.' A random, meaningless universe is cognitively harder to bear than 'my fault.' Park 2010 cites this as a paradigm case of **maladaptive assimilation** — it grants short-term control but worsens depression and PTSD if chronic. Clinically, instead of dismissing self-blame as 'a worthless thought,' it's more effective to explore **which global belief it is trying to preserve**.

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