Can you teach
people to have empathy?
BBC
News 29 June 2015
Empathy is a quality that is integral to most people's lives - and
yet the modern world makes it easy to lose sight of the feelings of
others. But almost everyone can learn to develop this crucial
personality trait, says Roman Krznaric.
Open Harper Lee's classic novel To Kill A
Mockingbird and one line will jump out at you: "You never really
understand another person until you consider things from his point
of view - until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in
it."
Human beings are naturally primed to embrace this
message. According to the latest neuroscience research, 98% of
people (the exceptions include those with psychopathic tendencies)
have the ability to empathise wired into their brains - an in-built
capacity for stepping into the shoes of others and understanding
their feelings and perspectives.
The problem is that most don't tap into their full
empathic potential in everyday life.
You can easily find yourself passing by a mother
struggling with a pram on some steps as you rush to a work meeting,
or read about a tragic earthquake in a distant country then let it
slip your mind as you click a link to check the latest football
results. an you read someone's
mind through their eyes?
The empathy gap can appear in personal relationships
too - like when I find myself shouting in frustration at my
six-year-old twins, or fail to realise that my partner is doing
more than her fair share of the housework.
So is there anything you can do to boost your
empathy levels? The good news is that almost everyone can learn to
be more empathic, just like we can learn to ride a bike or drive a
car.
A good warm up is to do a quick assessment of your
empathic abilities. Neuropsychologist Simon Baron-Cohen has devised
a test called
Reading the Mind in the Eyes in which you are shown 36
pairs of eyes and have to choose one of four words that best
describes what each person is feeling or thinking - for instance,
jealous, arrogant, panicked or hateful.
The average score of around 26 suggests that the
majority of people are surprisingly good - though far from perfect
- at visually reading others' emotions.
Going a step further, there are three simple but
powerful strategies for unleashing the empathic potential that is
latent in our neural circuitry.
"What is essential,' wrote Marshall Rosenberg,
psychologist and founder of Non-Violent Communication, "is our
ability to be present to what's really going on within - to the
unique feelings and needs a person is experiencing at that very
moment."
Listening out for people's feelings and needs -
whether it is a friend who has just been diagnosed with breast
cancer or a spouse who is upset at you for working late yet again -
gives them a sense of being understood.
Let people have
their say, hold back from interrupting and even reflect back what
they've told you so they knew you were really listening. There's a
term for doing this - "radical listening".
Radical listening can have an extraordinary impact on resolving
conflict situations. Rosenberg points out that in employer-employee
disputes, if both sides literally repeat what the other side just
said before speaking themselves, conflict resolution is reached 50%
faster.
A second step is to deepen empathic concern for
others by developing an awareness of all those individuals hidden
behind the surface of our daily lives, on whom we may depend in
some way. A Buddhist-inspired approach to this is to spend a whole
day becoming mindful of every person connected to your routine
actions.
So when you have your morning coffee, think about
the people who picked the coffee beans. As you button your shirt,
consider the labour behind the label by asking yourself: "Who sewed
on these buttons? Where in the world are they? What are their lives
like?"
Then continue throughout
the day, bringing this curiosity to who is driving the train,
vacuuming the office floor or stacking the supermarket shelves. It
is precisely such mindful awareness that can spark empathic action
on the behalf of others, whether it's buying Fairtrade coffee or
becoming friends with the office cleaner.
Bertolt Brecht wrote a wonderful poem about this called A Worker
Reads History, which begins: "Who built the seven gates of Thebes?
/ The books are filled with the names of kings / Was it the kings
who hauled the craggy blocks of stone?"
I used to
regularly walk past a homeless man around the corner from where I
live in Oxford and take virtually no notice of him. One day I
stopped to speak to him.
It turned out his name was Alan Human and he had a degree in
Philosophy, Politics and Economics from the University of Oxford.
We subsequently developed a friendship based on our mutual interest
in Aristotle's ethics and pepperoni pizza.
This encounter taught me that having conversations
with strangers opens up our empathic minds. We can not only meet
fascinating people but also challenge the assumptions and
prejudices that we have about others based on their appearance,
accents or backgrounds.
It's about recovering the curiosity everyone had as
children, but which society is so good at beating out of us. Get
beyond superficial talk but beware interrogating people. Respect
the advice of oral historian Studs Terkel - who always spoke to
people on the bus on his daily commute: "Don't be an examiner, be
the interested inquirer."
These are the kinds of conversations you will find
happening at the world's first Empathy
Museum, which is launching in the UK in late 2015 and
will then be travelling to Australia and other
countries.
Amongst the unusual exhibitions will be a human
library, where instead of borrowing a book you borrow a person for
conversation - maybe a Sikh teenager, an unhappy investment banker
or a gay father. In other words, the kind of people you may not get
to meet in everyday life.
Empathy is the cornerstone of healthy human
relationships.
As the psychologist and inventor of emotional
intelligence Daniel Goleman puts it, without empathy a person is
"emotionally tone deaf".
It's clear that with a little effort nearly everyone
can put more of their empathic potential to use. So try slipping on
your empathy shoes and make an adventure of looking at the world
through the eyes of others.