How to Stop Absorbing Other People’s Emotions

by | May 9, 2018

“How to Stop Absorbing Other People’s Emotions” was republished with permission from www.tinybuddha.com. You can find the original post here: “How I Learned to Stop Absorbing Other People’s Emotions”.

I felt her agony and loneliness as if it were my own. Even as I write that sentence, my eyes well up and heaviness fills my heart. Then, I’m reminded to apply the advice I give others.

My mom was a special person, a sensitive soul just like me. Actually, I’m so much like she was, yet so different. One of the differences between us is that I had an opportunity to observe her life’s challenges. I saw her challenges reflected within myself and made a conscious choice to find healthy ways to cope.

You see, my mom was a deep feeler and felt the emotions of people near and far. I imagine it was her strong empathy and personal challenges that led her to want to help others, as a wounded healer in a sense.

But as a helper and healer, she struggled with her mental and emotional health over the years. Witnessing her life moved me to learn how to regulate my own sensitive emotions and set healthy boundaries.

Sometimes I wonder if not knowing how to manage her empathy is what made her sick.

There are many ways to understand the challenges my mom battled before her death in 2007. From her perspective, she had a rare, unknown physical illness. Some who knew her may have thought she was manipulative and attention-seeking. Some would see an addiction to pain medication. Psychologists would diagnose her with a psychosomatic disorder, borderline personality disorder, and bipolar disorder.

Maybe all and none of those explanations are true. But perhaps she didn’t have any “disorder” at all. I’m not really asserting that to be true, but merely posing a curious question. What if she was just a sensitive, empathic person who lacked the skills to manage the pain around and within her? What if one unhelpful coping mechanism led to a slew of other ailments?

I believe my mom felt real physical and emotional pain. I struggled to fully understand her over the years. But after many years of reflection, I now trust her experience because of what I know about my own sensitive nature.

As sensitive people, we may present with high emotion and feel easily overwhelmed by our senses. We’re often told by the world that there’s something wrong with us. And when we think there’s something inherently wrong with us, we tend to tuck these traits away into our “shadow” or unconscious mind.

Well, now we’ve not only tucked away our core essence, but possibly the empathic depth that goes along with being a sensitive person as well. There may be a part of us that knows that we’re emotional sponges. Yet, we may choose to ignore our nature without really learning how to manage our empathy in such a way that prevents “dis-ease” and fosters well-being.

This was me for a long time.

Not only am I prone to feeling depleted and drained in situations with certain people, but the emotional pain of others tends to show up in my physical body. When I over-feel, my throat feels like it’s closing and as my chest constricts, my chronic back pain flares up.

My boyfriend was complaining of one of those small, painful pimples inside his nose recently. I got one as well. We joked about sympathy pains, but I do wonder sometimes.

I’ve felt the emotional pain of my family, friends, clients, and strangers. It’s not a simple, “Oh, I feel bad for him.” It’s feeling the despair and rejection of that teenager whose parents didn’t pick him up when he was released from the behavioral hospital where I worked. It’s the deep anguish of being that relative who feels no one believes her and she’s all alone.

I feel challenged to find the right language to express it all because the deep heartache and heavy burden is a feeling not a word.

The thing is that no matter how painful it is to feel the weight of the world in my body, I wouldn’t trade my depth and ability to feel for anything. The empathy that comes with high sensitivity is a true gift if we know how to use it.

We need more kind, compassionate people if we want to heal the world. Sensitive people have a natural capacity to show kindness because of our profound empathy.

Deep empathy gives us a special strength in relating and connecting with others. When we genuinely care, we’re more apt to be able to understand another person in a way not that all people can. Our sincerity can help us to develop meaningful, fulfilling relationships.

Relationships offer us a chance to not only grow a deep sense of connection with another human being but also an opportunity to learn about ourselves. Both of these are integral to the human experience.

And as sensitive people, we feel intense pain, but we also feel intense joy.

Yet, regulating our empathy is key to stopping the flood of emotion from overwhelming our ability to cope and care for our well-being.

If we want to stop absorbing other people’s emotions, it all starts with taking care of our physical, social, mental, emotional, and spiritual needs. I know it sounds like the whole world is harping on the idea of self-care, but there’s a reason for this.

When our own immune system or energy is depleted, we become a perfect sponge for sopping up emotions. We must take care of ourselves to avoid absorption in the first place.

6 Steps to Stop Absorbing Other People’s Emotions

1. When you notice heavy emotion, start by labeling what you’re feeling. Labeling helps to bring us into a state of pause, which can help us to gain a little distance from the emotional experience for a moment. Even a little distance helps us to begin to stop absorbing other people’s emotions.

2. Ask yourself whether what you’re feeling is yours, someone else’s, or a mix of the two. It can be difficult to discern the difference sometimes. One approach I like to take is if I think I might be feeling a particular person’s “stuff,” I’ll imagine the person as completely whole, content, and full of light. Then I’ll revisit my own experience and see if I still feel the same way. This played out in a recent loss in my life. While I was experiencing my own grief, when my relative who was closest to this person seemed to start to heal, I realized that much of my sadness released as well.

3. The moment you catch yourself feeling emotions that aren’t yours, raise your awareness of what’s happening within your mind and body. It can help to say the word “compassion” to yourself as a way of intentionally focusing on what you can do to be supportive rather than allowing yourself to be overpowered by emotion.

4. Take a deep breath and notice where in your body you feel the calmest, grounded, or neutral. It might be as simple as your toe or finger. Bring your attention to that place in your body and allow it to be a centering force to keep you grounded while you process and release any feelings you may have absorbed. Sometimes just having one calm place in our body can serve as a resource when the rest of you is feeling overwhelmed.

5. Return the other person’s emotions to them. It is not your responsibility to carry other people’s emotional distress, and equally important, it helps absolutely no one. Try saying to yourself, “I’m letting this emotional pain that is not mine go now.” Remember that other people have to go through their own processes in order to grow. When you stop absorbing other people’s emotions, you give both yourself and the other people a better opportunity to grow.

6. Use visualization to fully release the emotions. I find that it helps me to visualize a waterfall flowing through my body as a final release of any residual emotional gunk I might be carrying.

At the center of all of the above steps is building the awareness to know when we’re allowing ourselves to absorb and adopting tools to stop absorbing other’s people’s emotions. As a sensitive person, your empathy is a gift that the world needs. It’s up to each of us to channel our empathy into greater compassion so that we can remain strong and well.

For more HSP relationship tips and tools, check out my in-depth Highly Sensitive Person’s Relationship Guide.

9 Comments

  1. Ramona Rosiles

    I can’t believe i’ve heard from a person like me! I have 11 siblings and I am not like any of them!!! Thank you for this!!!

    Reply
    • Melissa Noel Renzi

      Wow, 11 siblings! I definitely know what it’s like to feel quite different from siblings. I’m glad you felt seen in this blog.

      Reply
      • Anonymous

        This helped me so much thank you

        Reply
  2. Emil

    Thank you so much for your advices! I’ve been struggling a lot my whole life because of my empathy. Like when someone starts to feel joy and I just can’t help myself to reflect their smile but even wider? Or when someone said how much I’ve hurt them and felt guilty thinking about how bad what I did was, only to talk to someone, whom I trusted deeply to help me, said how I had to look at my feelings and their feelings too before judging myself and side with the other party. This person kinda hinted me to this article and I thank you for writing something I can relate to ♥

    Reply
    • Melissa Noel Renzi

      Thank you for your comment, Emil! I’m glad you found my article helpful. With a lot of empathy, we can feel pain so deeply, but as you said, seeing someone’s joy is also that much more profound. You might check out this article that I wrote a while back as well: https://www.melissanoelrenzi.com/too-much-empathy/

      Reply
  3. Char

    My mother, who I haven’t seen in 10 years, recently suffered a stroke. She doesn’t have the ability to speak or move really. She was always a hot tempered person and just not what I needed as a mother, so I decided to stop communicating with her years ago. But recently with therapy I been thinking more about her and her struggles. She didn’t have an easy life. She was not raised by her bio mom and got pregnant at 17 to a much older man. These things made her a product of her environment. So I decided to reach out to re kindle a relationship and weeks after my first call with her she had a stroke and is bed ridden. There are no answers if she will get better. I find myself thinking she must feel terrible about her life decisions and I imagine the regret she must feel. These feelings cause me to have physical symptoms like vomiting, loss of appetite and insomnia. I can’t figure out how to turn them off. I wish i had a switch to just turn them off but every time I close my eyes I see her in the hospital bed. Deep breaths make me even more anxious. I raise awareness but I alway end up putting myself in her shoes again and again.

    Reply
    • Melissa Noel Renzi

      Char, I’m sorry for my late reply. I didn’t see your comment. I’m so sorry to hear about your mother. It sounds like you’re dealing with a mix of complex emotions all at once. These feelings you describe signal care and humanity within you — but her pain is also not yours to carry. I hope your therapist is helping you find ways to process these emotions and develop skills to feel compassion without taking it on. I know it’s not easy.

      Reply
  4. Samantha

    It is a relief to read about your experience and the other commenters. A huge awareness your article provided me is that when we are stressed or overwhelmed we are even more of an emotional sponge. I am a full time student and I am working so stress is a regular thing for me. I do not feel seen by the people in my life as who I am but rather as the “sensitive” one that no one gets. Sometimes I even feel like a bother because I am so sensitive. I cannot see a worm on the sidewalk about to dry out in the sun with out stopping and putting it in the dirt. I am the one everyone leans on. I have learned about codependency and I have gotten better with boundaries and saying no. Sometimes the amount of pain around me is unbearable. My best friend since high school (25 years) has become schizophrenic and calls and texts me is some sort of state of psychosis. My uncle is in the hospital dying and no one in the family seems to want to visit. My dad and I have been visiting him and my dad copes like he has always coped by drowning himself in a bottle of booze. I know when to let people go but in these situations it feels wrong to walk away. I am not trying to “save” them but I cannot help but be deeply impacted by them. It amazes me that people can just looks at these situations and “think, aw how sad” and move on with their lives. And yet I am still polite at the grocery store and I still make a stranger feel special just because I know they need it. Sometimes I am so tired of caring so much about everyone else and I want someone to care about me in the same kind of way. Anyway thanks for reading my comment. And thank you for the helpful and relatable article.

    Reply
    • Melissa Noel Renzi

      Thank you, Samantha. I’m glad the article offered some insight into how your nervous system shapes your capacity for empathy and how it impacts you. I know it can feel exhausting when you can’t look away and tend to hold things that are not yours to carry. Caring with boundaries truly is a dance. At the same time, the examples you shared, like saving a worm or helping a stranger feel seen, can be really meaningful. For me, those are the times where my empathy and a sense of agency come together in a more defined way that feels life-giving rather than draining.

      Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Guests enjoy a sunset on a yoga retreat for highly sensitive people

Seeking Meaningful Travel Without the Overwhelm?

Success! Look for my welcome email in your inbox. If you don't see it, check your SPAM!