Page No 62-75
Hazwa Aslam
Al-Hurraya, United Kingdom.
Theja Prabhakar
Aarupadai Veedu Medical College and Hospital, Puducherry, India
Sheetal Mehrotra
Amity University, Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India
The present study investigated if spiritual intelligence could determine mental wellbeing with fear of happiness, and fragility of happiness as the moderating variables.
Participants (N=300) male and female (Indian nationality), aged 18-65yrs, were selected
using convenient sampling and subjected to four scales- The Spiritual Intelligence Self
Report Inventory, Fear of Happiness Scale, Fragility of Happiness Scale, and The
Warwiñk-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale. Results showed that spiritual intelligence,
mental well-being, and fragility of happiness were related to each other; mental wellbeing significantly predicted by other two variables, and fragility of happiness significantly
moderated the relationship between spiritual intelligence and mental well-being. This
study outlines how spiritual intelligence and happiness interweave to cause a dynamic
impact on mental well-being
es.