Photo by Justin Luebke on Unsplash
The conversation went a little like
this: ‘Others (i.e. you) don’t really know what this is about…’ to which I
said, ‘Yes, but I’ve been through the same sort of season in the past.’ There
was tacit agreement.
The person had to agree. They knew
my story, and they knew I understood. But their point was, ‘But you’re not
there now.’
It was only later — 24-hours later —
that God nudged me about this conversation.
It was as if the Holy Spirit were
saying, ‘Your experience matters, and is
a good asset to offer the person, but in this case, it got in the way of
empathy.’ Sure, I was in a conversation of challenge. It wasn’t a
conversation where neither of us felt comfortable, and it was a necessary
conversation, but I was shown to have fallen short in this particular
interchange.
Experience is good, except when it
places us in the position where we’re above empathy.
Experience offers understanding but
it can fall short of empathy.
Experience demonstrates
understanding but only empathy shows an interest in the impact of what is being
faced.
Experience compares whereas empathy
seeks to get close, endeavouring to truly understand what could be still
misunderstood.
Experience demonstrates
understanding for what was experienced in the past, but it isn’t understanding
for what is happening in the present — that’s empathy.
We may have experienced a trial in
the past that helps the person before us, but that experience is useless to them
unless there is empathy enough to imagine my experience is not the same as
yours.
Your experience — no matter how similar
sounding it is — is not the same as mine. It isn’t experienced in the same period,
with the same people, in the same circumstances, or in the same place. Nearly
all the elements are different.
Bring experience into the arena of interaction,
but don’t leave understanding there. Take it all the way to empathy. Experience
is the door through which we enter and explore. That exploration is empathy.
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