The theme for Mental Health Week 2022 is empathy. What a great theme! We all need to build our empathy skills, and we’d all feel more seen, understood and connected if there was more empathy in the world. Particularly in our workplaces, where it sometimes feels like professionalism has been translated into leaving one’s emotions at home on the kitchen counter. Which, of course, is not a thing.
There have been several articles written about the importance of empathy in leadership over the past two years (see e.g.: Broom, 2021; Powers, 2022). Greater empathy skills in leaders are linked to a variety of positive outcomes including greater innovation, higher employee engagement, inclusion, and feeling respected and valued.
Our own research at YMCA WorkWell finds that when people are experiencing burnout, a need for more empathy from leaders is tied for third place, along with a need to feel more appreciated personally, and just behind better work/life balance and a more manageable workload (see Figure 1).
We hear that word a lot, but how do you actually define it? Turns out, that’s not so easy. There are multiple types of empathy. However, many people describe it as being able to step into someone else’s shoes or take their perspective – as Barack Obama put it: Being able to see the world through the eyes of someone who is different than us.
The goals of empathy are to help us connect to each other and to move us to extend kindness, support, or help. This means that one of the easiest ways to extend empathy to someone else is just to say, “I hear you and I’m here for you. How can I help?”
Some common empathy pitfalls to avoid include:
Taking Your Empathy Skills to the Next Level
If you’re already pretty proficient with your empathy skills, let’s talk about how you can take them to the next level. Remember I said that many people define empathy as being able to take someone else’s perspective? I’d like to suggest that we need to think about it a little differently. Can we ever truly step into someone else’s shoes? As we continue to work in the space of diversity and inclusion, I would argue that we can’t.
So, if we can’t “take” someone else’s perspective, what can we do?
We can seek to understand it. Instead of perspective-taking, it becomes perspective-seeking. This may seem like a semantic argument; however, it makes a big difference in how we approach developing our empathy skills and how we actually practice empathy.
1. Stop judging. We need to start by dismantling judgment. We can’t practice empathy when the voice in our head is chattering on about all the ways the other person has it “wrong”. Empathy is about seeking to understand another’s perspectives, values, and beliefs; we don’t need to take on those perspectives, values or beliefs ourselves. We don’t have to agree to empathize.
To practice this, we need to start with mindfulness – an awareness of when we’re shifting to judgment. What’s your internal narrative when you’re in judgment mode? How can you catch yourself and cultivate curiosity instead?
2. Ask open questions. The best way to cultivate curiosity and seek to understand is to ask great questions. Great questions are open-ended (i.e., can’t be answered by a simple “yes” or “no”) and invite meaningful dialogue. Some examples include:3. Listen actively. The key with active listening is to listen to understand, rather than to respond. This means we need to quiet that inner voice in our head that is reacting to what someone else is saying and thinking about what we are going to say next (dismantling judgment, again), and focus on truly hearing what the other person is saying. Mindfulness is really helpful here. If you find that you struggle with active listening, set a goal to paraphrase what someone has said back to them when you’re practicing empathy.
4. Connect to emotion. Brené Brown defines empathy as “connecting to the emotions that underpin an experience.” When we connect to the emotions as well as the substance of what someone else is experiencing, we connect to who they are in that moment. There are so many emotions available to us, and identifying how we are feeling can help us and others with understanding where that emotion is coming from, accepting it, and also letting it go.
So, let me give you an example. My partner is writing a non-fiction book and he’s in the editing phase. I agreed to help him with editing, and we are two chapters away from being finished. As I was reading this second-last chapter, I was frustrated because I felt like I was reading what I had already read several times before. I gave him feedback that I thought the chapter could be better structured to reduce the repetition and more effectively convey the “how” of the topic.
He responded in a way that sounded almost angry to me and it might have been natural to get defensive about “just trying to help”. Instead, I mindfully tried to connect to how he could be feeling and I said, “It sounds like you feel discouraged and like this process is never going to end. Is that how you’re feeling right now?”
In that moment, we connected around this shared experience from our different perspectives. Notice that I didn’t assume how he “must” be feeling and that I used his body language, facial expression, tone and words to help guide me to the underlying emotion – and then I checked my understanding, allowing him to confirm my “read” or to say, “Actually, how I’m feeling is…”
This may seem like a lot...and it is. It can be hard to practice in the moment. You can work on all four of these skills, but know that any improvement you make on any one of them will make a difference. The key is to know is that empathy is a skill, and we can build that skill through practice.
The wonderful thing about empathy is that we get to foster that sense of connection to another person, something that we all need as human beings. And we get to really know that we are not alone in life’s joys, challenges, and sorrows.
I hope that you take some time this week to #tunein to someone else and flex your empathy muscles. You’ll be glad you did.