Would it be possible to get the site linked below as a sticky on this page? It seems that many people here are not clear on the difference between Empathy and Sympathy, and I feel like it's important that they are, seeing as they're frequently accused of lacking one of them.
_________________________________________________
I linked to this site the other day as an EXCELLENT distinction between the two. I've checked these definitions with several friends, and as a filmmaker, this is the understanding that I've always had of the two words (empathy with characters is required for a successful horror film, for instance, not sympathy).
Difference Between Empathy and Sympathy
Here are two perfect and easy to understand definitions from the site:
Empathy: The ability to co-experience and relate to the thoughts, emotions, or experience of another without them being communicated directly by the individual.
Sympathy: The ability to understand and to support the emotional situation or experience of another being with compassion and sensitivity.
The two are actually quite different, if you think about it. Empathy is almost a psychic experience; at the very least, intuition. When I'm in a room with other people, I take on the moods of those people. I can feel what they feel. That's why I don't remain angry for long after getting into a fight with someone, because as soon as the other person has distanced themselves from me, the feeling of anger dissipates and I feel happy, as if nothing happened.
Sympathy is not at all about feeling what another person is feeling, but understanding what another person is going through, and wanting to do something to help them or make the hurting stop for that person.
The way I see it, I think it's more than likely that Aspies have plenty of Empathy, but little to no Sympathy. That's the case with me, at least. If I'm the room with someone who feels sad, I will feel sad...but I don't know how to make that person feel better, and don't really care...I just want them to feel better so that I can stop feeling the same way.
They can also be simplified this way: Empathy results from an UNSPOKEN sense of what another person is feeling. Sympathy requires a verbalization on part of the other person as to what they are feeling, and then an attempt on your part to understand it, and a resulting desire to help the person. If someone is not saying anything, I will pick up on their emotion and feel it myself. If someone TELLS me what they are feeling, I don't identify with it.[u]
_________________
Aspie Quiz: AS - 141/200, NT - 77/200 (Very likely an Aspie)
AQ: 34/50 (Aspie range)
EQ: 32 / SQ: 68 (Extreme Systemizing / AS or HFA)
Diagnosed with AS and Anxiety Disorder - NOS on 03/21/2012