0:00:09.286,0:00:11.264 So what is empathy? 0:00:11.264,0:00:14.348 And why is it very [br]different than sympathy? 0:00:14.758,0:00:17.012 Empathy fuels connection. 0:00:17.312,0:00:19.709 Sympathy drives disconnection. 0:00:20.350,0:00:22.174 Empathy--it's very interesting, 0:00:22.174,0:00:26.687 Teresa Wiseman is a nursing [br]scholar who studied professions, 0:00:26.929,0:00:29.421 very diverse professions [br]where empathy is relevant, 0:00:29.421,0:00:31.615 and came up with four [br]qualities of empathy. 0:00:31.615,0:00:34.761 Perspective taking--[br]the ability to take the perspective 0:00:34.761,0:00:38.355 of another person or recognize [br]their perspective is their truth. 0:00:38.355,0:00:40.017 Staying out of judgement. 0:00:40.017,0:00:42.605 Not easy, when you enjoy it [br]as much as most of us do. 0:00:44.079,0:00:45.874 Recognizing emotion in other people, 0:00:45.874,0:00:47.781 and then communicating that. 0:00:47.916,0:00:51.242 Empathy is feeling with people. 0:00:51.973,0:00:56.435 And to me I always think of empathy [br]as this kind of sacred space 0:00:56.435,0:00:58.569 when someone's kind of in a deep hole, 0:00:58.590,0:01:00.917 and they shout out from the bottom [br]and they say, 0:01:01.216,0:01:03.948 "I'm stuck. It's dark. I'm overwhelmed." 0:01:04.001,0:01:06.488 And then we look and we say, 0:01:06.488,0:01:10.475 "Hey." Climb down. [br]"I know what it's like down here." 0:01:10.487,0:01:12.334 "And you're not alone." 0:01:12.334,0:01:18.185 Sympathy is, "Ooh. It's bad. Uh-huh." 0:01:18.185,0:01:22.047 "Uh, no. You want a sandwich?" 0:01:24.394,0:01:27.075 Empathy is a choice and[br]it's a vulnerable choice 0:01:27.075,0:01:29.224 because in order to connect with you, 0:01:29.224,0:01:31.904 I have to connect with something in myself 0:01:31.904,0:01:34.068 that knows that feeling. 0:01:34.319,0:01:39.498 Rarely, if ever, does an empathic [br]response begin with, "at least." 0:01:40.753,0:01:41.753 [Laughter] 0:01:43.008,0:01:44.500 And we do it all the time! 0:01:44.500,0:01:47.407 Because you know what, [br]someone just shared something with us 0:01:47.407,0:01:51.011 that's incredibly painful and[br]we're trying to silver-lining it. 0:01:51.011,0:01:54.167 I don't think that's a verb, [br]but I'm using it as one. 0:01:54.167,0:01:56.528 We're trying to put the [br]silver lining around it. 0:01:56.552,0:01:58.596 So, "I had a miscarriage." 0:01:58.596,0:02:01.071 "Oh, at least you know you [br]can get pregnant." 0:02:01.071,0:02:03.389 "I think my marriage is falling apart." 0:02:03.389,0:02:05.540 "At least you have a marriage." 0:02:05.757,0:02:08.673 [Laughter] 0:02:09.087,0:02:11.118 "John's getting kicked out of school." 0:02:11.118,0:02:13.445 "At least Sarah is an A student." 0:02:13.445,0:02:15.360 But one of the things we do sometimes 0:02:15.360,0:02:19.610 in the face of very [br]difficult conversations, 0:02:19.743,0:02:22.158 is we try to make things better. 0:02:22.234,0:02:24.815 If I share something with [br]you that's very difficult, 0:02:24.815,0:02:26.454 I'd rather you say, 0:02:26.454,0:02:30.841 "Uff. I don't even know what to say [br]right now, I'm just so glad you told me." 0:02:31.269,0:02:36.045 Because the truth is, rarely can a [br]response make something better. 0:02:36.045,0:02:42.618 What makes something better is connection.