Empathy is when you feel what someone else feels, like you're wearing their feelings; sympathy is when you feel for someone, like you're giving them a hug from afar.
Imagine you have a best friend who just spilled juice all over their favorite shirt.
- If you feel empathy, it's like the juice spill happens to you too, you feel sad and maybe even a little embarrassed.
- If you feel sympathy, you're still happy in your clean clothes, but you give your friend a big smile and say, “That’s okay! I’m here for you!”
What Makes Empathy Special
Empathy is like having a shared feeling with someone.
If your friend is laughing, you laugh too; if they’re crying, you cry too, it's like sharing the same feelings.
Sympathy Is Like Being a Supportive Friend
Sympathy is when you care about someone else’s feelings, but you don’t feel them yourself.
You might say, “That’s tough!” or offer your friend a tissue, it's a kind and caring feeling, but not the same as being in their shoes.
So empathy is feeling with, sympathy is feeling for. Both are wonderful!
Examples
- Empathy is like feeling what someone else feels, while sympathy is just knowing they're sad.
- Imagine a classmate falls down, if you laugh with them, it’s empathy; if you just feel bad for them, it’s sympathy.
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See also
- What are mirror neurons?
- What are fun messages?
- What are neurotransmitter systems?
- What is Interhemispheric connectivity?
- What are smell signals?