matmos
Active member
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- Mar 24, 2008
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- NICE
And it is a very simple and obvious exercise.
But easier to not do than do.
And it is a very simple and obvious exercise.
...having someone else say "Hey, that happens to me, too!" can be the difference between depression and motivation. I know this from my own experience, and I am very thankful for this forum in this regard.
I feel empathy for what he is going through, but not sympathy.
Ok, I'm not going to go back and forth with this and I'm kind of tired of this thread now...
It's empathy because I don't feel it, but I can identify his feeling because I have felt it before, sometime in the past. But that doesn't mean that I feel it now, on his behalf. So it's not sympathy.![]()
Empathy means you know what he is feeling without feeling it yourself.
But you are telling us you are feeling it yourself - so you are sympathising rather than empathising.
Empathy is feeling the same feelings.
Sympathy is understanding the feelings, but not feeling them yourself.
Ok, I'm not going to go back and forth with this and I'm kind of tired of this thread now...
It's empathy because I don't feel it, but I can identify his feeling because I have felt it before, sometime in the past. But that doesn't mean that I feel it now, on his behalf. So it's not sympathy.![]()
Look, Halla is a grown man and he will do what's best for himself. He posted this because he wanted feedback on the methods. So I gave him my interpretation. He can take it or leave it.
A feeling is felt - it's either good or bad, that's pretty much the extent of it. If it's good, I roll with it. If it's bad, I act on it. So of course feelings drive decisions. But I won't act even on a good feeling if it doesn't make logical sense to do so - I think we're all like that. Someone may be attractive, but that doesn't mean it makes sense to date that person. I think of all the pros and cons, the effect my decision will have on others, and the effect my decision will have on myself. Then I choose what seems the most logical and what seems will create the less damage down the road, for all parties involved. Later, I reflect on everything and I am then able (most often) to pinpoint what made the feeling good or bad. But the name of the feeling itself doesn't matter. The point is I felt something that spurred me to action.
But in Halla's case, he has more than just his emotions to worry about.
...what we feel resistance to is the very thing we should be looking at more closely.
You have it exactly the wrong way round.
Are you trying to be funny?
Do you ever have these gut "hunches" that guide your decisions? I usually view emotional decisions as something like that.
1. How can your counselor be trying to tell you something for months? Why doesn't he just say it?? Seems incredible ineffective as a professional. (sorry, just my honest opinion)
No, because I am correct.
People are called "empathic" when they feel another person's emotions. That's empathy. "I feel your pain," is empathy. "I'm sorry for your loss," is sympathy.
Sorry, incorrect.
em⋅pa⋅thy
–noun 1. the intellectual identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another.
sym⋅pa⋅thy
–noun 1. harmony of or agreement in feeling, as between persons or on the part of one person with respect to another.
2. the harmony of feeling naturally existing between persons of like tastes or opinion or of congenial dispositions.
3. the fact or power of sharing the feelings of another, esp. in sorrow or trouble; fellow feeling, compassion, or commiseration.
'Nuff said.
Empathy is when you can objectively identify or understand what a person is going through. You can imagine what they may be going through but your current feelings are not involved.
Sympathy is when you can actually feel their pain.
Both empathy and sympathy are feelings concerning other people. Sympathy is literally 'feeling with' - compassion for or commiseration with another person. Empathy, by contrast, is literally 'feeling into' - the ability to project one's personality into another person and more fully understand that person. Sympathy derives from Latin and Greek words meaning 'having a fellow feeling'. The term empathy originated in psychology (translation of a German term, c. 1903) and has now come to mean the ability to imagine or project oneself into another person's position and experience all the sensations involved in that position. You feel empathy when you've "been there", and sympathy when you haven't. Examples: We felt sympathy for the team members who tried hard but were not appreciated. / We felt empathy for children with asthma because their parents won't remove pets from the household.
Empathy is when you can objectively identify or understand what a person is going through. You can imagine what they may be going through but your current feelings are not involved.
Sympathy is when you can actually feel their pain.