sun seeker
Diamond Member
It's a good point a few of you have made, that getting upset by lack of empathy may have to do with how people in the past did or didn't respond to our trauma and need for help. I hadn't thought of it that way but it makes a lot of sense. I think having gone through trauma opens us more to empathize with the experiences of others that don't fit in the "box" of usual human experience (though sometimes I wonder how many people do fit in that box; it's such a small one!) I've gotten to the point where I think I can hear anyone talk about any kind of trauma they have been through and empathize with their experience, even if it is far from my own. That is, I don't think there is any possible human experience anymore that is outside the realm of my imagination, because in so many ways I've been "stretched" already. So even if your experience is different from mine, I can still go there, still empathize and want to understand.
What I still don't really understand is why some people who have also gone through trauma are still callous around the suffering of others. I see it from time to time here on the forum with insensitive things people say to each other, though it is not the norm, thank God, or I wouldn't be here! It makes me feel ill every time I do see it. I feel it as if it were directed at me, even if I have nothing to do with the discussion, just as I used to feel in school. Laurence Heller talks about "psychic boundaries" and how they don't form properly when there is early trauma, so we do feel more of what is happening around us. In a vicious circle that makes us more easily re-traumatized.
What I still don't really understand is why some people who have also gone through trauma are still callous around the suffering of others. I see it from time to time here on the forum with insensitive things people say to each other, though it is not the norm, thank God, or I wouldn't be here! It makes me feel ill every time I do see it. I feel it as if it were directed at me, even if I have nothing to do with the discussion, just as I used to feel in school. Laurence Heller talks about "psychic boundaries" and how they don't form properly when there is early trauma, so we do feel more of what is happening around us. In a vicious circle that makes us more easily re-traumatized.