Empathy
By
Dr. Tony Alessandra
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The root of the word empathy is PATHOS - the Greek
word for feeling. SYMpathy means acknowledging the
feelings of someone else as in "I sympathize with
you." EMpathy is a term for a deeper feeling. It
means, "I feel what you feel. I can put myself in
your shoes." Sympathy results in kindness and
sometimes pity. Empathy results in actually feeling
the pain, or the joy, of the other person.
You
can see how the willingness to be flexible comes more easily when you can
put yourself in the other person's shoes. Empathy is a key skill taught in
negotiating. William Ury, in his book, GETTING PAST NO, makes the
point that every human being has a deep need for his or her feelings to be
recognized. Knowing this can help tremendously in a difficult negotiation by
creating a climate for agreement.
Ury
counsels that it's important to acknowledge both the factual point, and the
feelings of the other person. He uses the example of an employee approaching
a boss. The employee says: "I just found out Dale makes two thousands
dollars more a year than I do for the same job." Trying to explain why Dale
makes more money, even if the reason is a good one, only makes the employee
angrier. Instead, you must acknowledge the fact and the feelings first: "You
think we're taking advantage of you and you're angry. I can understand that.
I'd probably feel the same way."
That
isn't what an angry person expects. By acknowledging the employee's
feelings, you've helped him calm down. His next statement might be: "Well,
why shouldn't I make as much as Dale does?" That shows he's ready to hear
your explanation.
The
feeling of empathy is much easier to come by when you care about the other
person and take the time to feel what they're feeling. In the worlds of
business, politics, or the professions, that feeling of empathy may not come
as easily.
All
the great teachers of empathy for others start with the same point: You
cannot truly feel the pain or the joy or the emotion of another until and
unless you're able to feel the same thing in yourself. Do you acknowledge
your own pain? Can you feel your own joy? Real empathy lies in simply
finding the same place within yourself that the other person is
experiencing. You might not have had exactly the same experience but you've
known the sadness of loss or the anger of feeling cheated, or the sense of
righteousness at injustice. Some of us don't take the time to feel our own
feelings, so when someone else expresses a feeling, we don't have much to
refer to.
Let
me give you another tip. Sometimes we can share a deep feeling vicariously
through reading a great novel or seeing a powerful movie. If you're on a
steady diet of action movies, they don't usually dwell on individual
feelings. You might want to take the time to broaden your reading and
viewing habits.
Men
are being encouraged to express and share their feelings more these days
through the efforts of Robert Bly and others. And not just soft, vulnerable
feelings, but feelings of anger and frustration as well. You might be
concerned that expressing a caring approach toward another person will
result in the other person manipulating you. This isn't about abdicating
your own needs or point of view. It simply means that you're able to step
into the shoes of another and acknowledge their feelings. Having that
ability is an asset. You can always wear your own shoes, and you do most of
the time.