
What’s Your Empathy Style?
We each have a natural way of expressing empathy—whether it’s cognitive, emotional, intuitive, or spiritual. This “empathy style” shapes how you care for yourself and connect with others.
By identifying your primary style, you begin to understand how you’re wired. While you may relate to more than one, most people have a default way of responding—your go-to approach to giving and receiving care. Recognizing this is the first step toward working with your empathy, rather than feeling overwhelmed by it.
Each style has its own strengths and challenges, and all can be deeply healing in different ways. The goal isn’t to change who you are, but to make the most of your natural gifts while staying open to expanding them. In The Genius of Empathy, I explore these four styles in depth—their advantages, limitations, and how to bring them into balance.
Style 1. Cognitive Empathy: The Thinker/Fixer
If your primary empathy style is cognitive, you’re most comfortable with a concrete, cerebral approach to emotions. Consider this style “thinking empathy.” You use your mind to understand others and wish the best for them. You are solution-oriented. You want to logically fix a problem with brain power but are frustrated if you can’t. You may respond to a friend in distress with “I understand that this situation is hurtful, and here’s what you can do about it” rather than “My heart feels for you,” and then give them space to express their discomfort.
Style 2. Emotional Empathy: The Feeler
If your primary empathy style is emotional, you empathize with others through your emotions. Consider this style “feeling empathy.” You have a big heart and are responsive to people’s needs. You feel everything, but sometimes to an extreme. Like me and many other sensitive empaths, you may be an emotional sponge whose body absorbs others’ distress as well their joy. Since emotions can be contagious, you are vulnerable to catching them.
Style 3. Intuitive Empathy: The Subtle Senser
If your primary empathy style is intuitive, your keen intuition and sensitivity let you read people and their nonverbal cues more easily. Consider this style “sensing empathy.” Your intuition senses if someone is being authentic or if they aren’t. You have strong gut feelings, ah-ha insights, knowings, or dreams. You also feel the positive and negative vibes that people emit. These vibes come from what Chinese medical practitioners call “chi,” or subtle energy, which extends inches or feet from the skin.
Style 4. Spiritual Empathy: The Mystic
If your primary empathy style is spiritual, you empathize with others through your spirituality. Consider this style “divining empathy,” which describes the process of connecting to spirituality (however you define it) to open your heart. For some, spirituality could be God, Goddess, nature, a creative intelligence, or the power of love. The divine is a stepping stone to your large, compassionate self. You become a vessel for Spirit as you give and receive empathy. In some spiritual traditions ego = edging God out, which you are less prone to do.
The most significant relationship you’ll ever have is with yourself. Knowing your empathy style provides a basic understanding of how to productively express caring and where you are off balance. This information lets you love yourself more and find a comfortable, healing mode of giving and self-care.
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