Can you have too much empathy?

“Crescendo” by Mimi Stuart ©

Can you have too much empathy?

Empathy is often considered to be the source of good behavior. The literal meaning of empathy is “the ability to share another person’s feelings.” Our culture highly values empathy and assumes you cannot have too much of it. However, when you experience other people’s feelings too strongly, you can run into problems. Paul Bloom’s book “Against Empathy” shows how empathy can often prevent a person from making sound decisions in a crisis:

“Unmitigated communion makes you suffer when faced with those who are suffering, which imposes costs on yourself and makes you less effective at helping.”

Compassion, Kindness, Empathy

There are subtle distinctions between compassion, kindness, and empathy. Compassion is the concern for the suffering of others, which is different from actually feeling or experiencing the suffering of others. Kindness means being friendly, generous, and considerate of others. Kindness creates positive other-oriented feelings and makes other people feel better, which results in positive health effects all around. Compassion and kindness promote pro-social motivation and behavior, and are not likely to get in the way of good decision-making and helpful action.

Empathy, on the other hand, often comes at a great cost. As Walt Whitman quipped: “I do not ask the wounded person how he feels, I myself become the wounded person.” Becoming the wounded person can motivate one to help the suffering person. However, it also creates distress for the empathetic person, which can overwhelm the empathetic person and cloud clear thinking.


Do people in distress benefit from empathy?

Would you want a therapist to feel depressed or anxious when dealing with a patient who is depressed or anxious? Therapy would be impossible if therapists couldn’t put aside some of their empathy. Would you want a doctor to be overwhelmed with grief when dealing with the grief-stricken family members of a sick or dying patient? Would you want a pilot to feel the fear of the passengers in an emergency situation while airborne? Would you want a fireman to feel your loss while your life and property are burning or at risk? Clearly not. You want them to do their job calmly, quickly, and rationally, free of distracting emotions.

The ability to empathize can motivate a desire to help. But too much empathy can cause feelings of distress, which can incapacitate the empathetic person and obstruct objective thinking and effective action. Therefore, you can have more positive impact on others and on your own wellbeing when you do not experience too much empathy, albeit some empathy is helpful in making a person aware that others are suffering. People can be more effective helping distressed people when they are NOT experiencing strong feelings. The suffering person benefits more from people whose strength and decision-making are not hindered by feelings of distress.

A therapist should try to understand a client’s feelings, but without matching or absorbing those feelings. It is more important to be engaged by a client’s challenges and to think creatively about possible tools, options and solutions for improving the client’s life. In a medical emergency, you would want a trauma surgeon to stop the bleeding and assess the situation quickly without pausing to feel the patient’s pain. Pilots should focus on what actions are needed while remaining emotionally separated from their passengers in order to best serve them.

How does empathy affect relationships?

Too much empathy in a relationship leads to emotional fusion, which is quite destructive to the individuals involved. If your partner feels your anger or panic to the extent that you do, that will exacerbate the situation. If, instead, your partner remains emotionally separate, objective, calm and compassionate, then he or she can be a rock for you and help you gain perspective and insight into your situation. You can get better support and advice from someone who does not freak out or become upset when you are suffering and need support. Someone who remains cool and calm in difficult times can better guide and counsel you through emotional turmoil.

Similarly, parents who demonstrate too much empathy will overreact when their children are hurt or upset. A parent’s anxiety is infectious and will only increase the fearfulness and distress of the child. If the parent habitually overreacts to the child’s distress, either by panic or extreme coaxing or placating, the child may very well become an anxious, insecure individual. Children need to sense from their parents’ demeanor that everything will be fine. Often they learn resiliency and faith in the future from the parent’s calm, solution-oriented demeanor in stressful situations.

If you want to be effective at alleviating someone’s suffering, it is best to be compassionate and kind while remaining calm and emotionally separate enough to use your reason.

by Alison Poulsen, PhD

Reference: “Against Empathy” by Paul Bloom. 2016.

3 thoughts on “Can you have too much empathy?

  1. I have been accused of being too empathetic and also too generous. I myself, have had difficulty with this and wonder why I do it?
    On thanksgiving of this year, I gave our cat away to my daughter’s boyfriend. I had asked my husband first and he said “yes”.
    The poor guy lost his cat about a month ago…one that he dearly loved, and he has been sad ever since. I asked my husband about giving the cat away and he said it was okay to.
    The boyfriend needed time to think about it, because he feels he hasn’t yet completely grieved the loss of his own cat. I told him that the cat would wait for him because they both hit it off, and then today, my husband changed his mind, and said over and over again, that I had no right to offer up the cat.
    I am feeling ashamed of myself and totally overwhelmed. So I emailed my daughter and apologized for my mistake; that I had made a mistake. Please help me in whatever ways you can!

    • Don’t feel ashamed! You were being kind. I would simply say that you wanted to be kind and help your daughter’s boyfriend in his grief. In the meantime, your husband realized how much the cat meant to him. You are sure he’ll understand given the boyfriend’s own connection to his prior cat. If you want you can help him find another cat. There is absolutely nothing to be ashamed about. This is all understandable, and stems from your kindness.

      Please note that if you act terribly sorry and ashamed, rather than just sad for his grief, then you may seem guilty–as though you have done something wrong. But you haven’t done anything wrong, even in changing your mind about giving away the cat. You and your husband’s feelings toward your own cat are equally important and stronger than the boyfriend’s attachment to your cat.

      Treat the boyfriend as a man–grief is normal, but he should understand your husband’s attachment to your cat, and he will recover from his grief. Don’t infantilize him. And you don’t need to over-apologize or try to fix everything. Try to focus on something else!

      Good luck!

      • PS Empathy is a wonderful quality to alert us to others’ feelings and enable us to take appropriate action. But too dwelling in those feelings weakens are ability to be objective. It also can leave us disheartened and weak. Be grateful and proud of your empathy but try not to dwell in it too much.

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