Monday, December 14, 2009

Positive Psychology News Daily » Empathy and What It Teaches Us

Positive Psychology News Daily » Empathy and What It Teaches Us

Positive Psychology News

Empathy and What It Teaches Us ***

By Aren Cohen on December 12, 2009 – 6:03 pm *

Aren Cohen, MBA, MAPP '07 is a learning coach working with academically, motivationally and emotionally challenged students in the leading private schools in New York City. Aren is also writing a book on the positive psychology of fathers and daughters based on her original research using the famous longitudinal Harvard Grant Study of Adult Development. *

Aren writes on the 12th of each month, and her past articles are here. *

We all know that a guiding principle of positive psychology is that “Other people matter.” What is it that makes other people matter to us? Empathy. *

Empathy is commonly defined as the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. Our ability to relate to another person will inherently be the context in which they have meaning to us. If we cannot understand another person, why should they matter to us? By having insight into how another person feels, we can participate in her experience and comprehend the emotions, good, bad or indifferent, that she feels. Empathy makes us better people because it takes us outside ourselves. It forces us to acknowledge people around us as human, replete with the same panoply of feelings that we ourselves possess. Empathy allows us to appreciate others because we partake in their emotional lives. *

On November 13, 2009, I attended The Wonderplay Conference: Early Childhood Learning at the 92nd Street Y (http://www.92y.org/) in New York City. The theme of the conference was Building Empathy and Resilience: The Role of the Early Educator. The conference was a full day affair with two keynote speakers in the morning and two breakout sessions in the afternoon. While all of the content was fascinating, the presentation I found most stimulating was Dr. Kyle Pruett’s “Empathy and the Teachable Moment.” Dr. Pruett is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Nursing at the Yale School of Medicine’s Child Study Center. *

Dr. Pruett’s definition of empathy is “mindful perception of another’s emotional experience.” He discussed how empathy is more powerful than sympathy (defined as emotional resonance) or self-awareness (which would be akin to projecting our own feelings on others or anthropomorphizing animals). Empathy, unlike sympathy or self-awareness, engenders a sense of reciprocal obligation in us. When we are sympathetic, we care, up to a point. When we are empathic, we feel what another feels and we are moved to act on his or her behalf. We jump up and down with her if she’s joyful; we enfold him in a bear hug if he is sad. *

Where does empathy come from? How does it develop within us as children, so that we become empathic adults? Child psychologists Anna Freud and Jean Piaget believed that empathy was part of our moral development. Martin Hoffman, in his studies of empathy in children attributed it to intrinsic growth; morality that developed from a pro-social, perspective-taking stance. What is important about children learning empathy is that it signifies that they have learned that the world is not “all about me.” *

Dr. Pruett walked his audience through the empathic trajectory, which described how children’s brains develop empathy from ages 0-8. At 9 months children learn that others have emotions. Between a year and 18 month, a child will reach out and loan her binky or blanket to an unhappy friend. As children get older, they develop sympathetic and helping behaviors, and then they learn to move beyond themselves, as their brains mature and their use of language grows. By the time children are 7 or 8, they have moved beyond the basic idea of “what is fair,” to start creating their own ideas of moral reasoning and social justice. *

Dr. Pruett raised questions about how we teach empathy, or if it is programmed in us by nature. Additionally, he asked the audience if we believe there is a gender gap in the way the sexes exhibit empathy. While fascinating conversations came out of these queries, it seems that much more research is needed. *

In positive psychology, we skirt around the issue of empathy. Compassion or kindness is one of the twenty-four strengths, but actual empathy, the act of mindful perception of another’s emotional experience, seems to slip through the cracks. We know that other people matter, but the WAY they matter to us is deeply important. Without empathy, people are, in a way, just placeholders. Empathy makes us respond to the feelings of other people. *

It was meaningful to me that early educators are exploring how, or if, empathy is teachable. When I think about all the good positive interventions we know, I realize there are few that exercise our empathy. *

In their book, Why Good Things Happen to Good People, Dr. Stephen Post and Jill Neimark discuss the many benefits of giving. They define giving broadly, not just in the material sense, but also other ways of giving one’s self, including celebration, loyalty, humor, and respect. What strikes me about this kind of giving is that it is only possible with empathy. Giving benefits us because it allows us to make others feel good. We understand that we have done this through our own empathy. It is, in fact, the golden rule we learn at age 7 or 8, “do unto others.” What is unexpected is that doing unto others is the positive intervention. Using our empathy to give provides us with psychological and physical rewards. *

As we approach the holiday season, we should focus on our empathy and our giving. Times are hard these days, but we increase the happiness in the world most when we to reach out to others and are generous with them, not just with things, but with spirit and soul. Now is the time. *
References*

Post, S. & Neimark, J. (2008). Why Good Things Happen to Good People: How to Live a Longer, Healthier, Happier Life by the Simple Act of Giving. New York: Broadway. *

Pruett, K. (2001). Fatherneed: Why Father Care is as Essential as Mother Care for Your Child. New York: Broadway. *

Pruett, K. (2009). Partnership Parenting: How Men and Women Parent Differently–Why It Helps Your Kids and Can Strengthen Your Marriage. Da Capo Lifelong Books. *

Live via satellite or webcast from New York’s 92nd Street Y: Building Empathy & Resilience: The Role of the Early Childhood Educator — The live broadcast is now over, but you can purchase a DVD from this site. *

A YouTube interview with Dr. Kyle Pruett *

Access Original Post: http://positivepsychologynews.com/news/aren-cohen/200912126410



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http://dreamlearndobecome.blogspot.com This posting was made my Jim Jacobs, President & CEO of Jacobs Executive Advisors. Jim also serves as Leader of Jacobs Advisors' Insurance Practice.

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