Empaths share all the traits of what Dr. Elaine Aron has called
“Highly Sensitive People,” or HSPs.
These include: a low threshold for
stimulation; the need for alone time; sensitivity to light, sound, and smell;
and an aversion to large groups.
It also takes highly sensitive people
longer to wind down after a busy day, since their ability to transition
from high stimulation to being quiet is slower.
Highly sensitive people
are typically introverts, while empaths can be introverts or extroverts (although most are introverts).
Empaths share a highly sensitive person’s love of nature and quiet environments, their desire to help others, and their rich inner life.
However, empaths take the experience of the highly sensitive person
much further: We can sense subtle energy (called shakti or prana in
Eastern healing traditions) and actually absorb it from other people and
different environments into our own bodies.
Highly sensitive people
don’t typically do that. This capacity allows us to experience the
energy around us, including emotions and physical sensations, in
extremely deep ways.
And so we energetically internalize the feelings
and pain of others — and often have trouble distinguishing someone
else’s discomfort from our own. Also, some empaths have profound spiritual
and intuitive experiences — with animals, nature, or their inner guides
— which aren’t usually associated with highly sensitive people.
Being a highly sensitive person and an empath are not mutually
exclusive: One can be both, and many highly sensitive people are also
empaths.
If you think about this distinction in terms of an empathic spectrum, empaths are on the far end; highly sensitive people are a little further in; people with strong empathy who are not HSPs or empaths are in the middle; and narcissists, sociopaths, and psychopaths who have “empath-deficient disorders” are at the far opposite end.
The Empathic Spectrum
Narcissists Loving empathic people HSPs Empaths
___i____________________i____________________i______________i__
The gifts of sensitivity and empathy are precious. We want to keep
opening our hearts and break through to new heights in the empathic
spectrum. We need these gifts now more than ever.
Adapted from The Empath’s Survival Guide by Judith Orloff, M.D.
psychologytoday.com
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