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Exhausted by empathy?
Mint New Delhi
|October 04, 2025
A fortnightly column about emotional well-being Empathy leads us to show concern and compassion, but 'too much empathy' can leave us burnt out
Empathic distress can take the form of fatigue.
(ISTOCKPHOTO)
A 33-year-old client asked me if "too much empathy" is a bad thing. "I feel empathy is one of my biggest strengths but also a weakness. I'm wondering if it tires me out sometimes and then all I want to do is hide," she said.
This is a sentiment I often hear in therapy sessions, particularly from doctors, palliative care workers, journalists, social workers, caregivers, therapists, teachers, young mothers and from people across age groups for whom empathy is a top trait.
What the client is referring to and experiencing is "empathic distress". Researchers Tania Singer and Olga Klimecki in a 2014 paper titled Empathy and Compassion mentioned how empathy can take the form of fatigue and lead to the individual wanting to safeguard themselves from the overwhelming negative feelings they experience.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 04, 2025-Ausgabe von Mint New Delhi.
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