Family, Self

QUIZ: Is Your Child An Empath? (Plus: Tips For Raising Empathetic Children)

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child empath signs

Empathic children have nervous systems which react more quickly and strongly to external stimuli including stress.

In The Empath’s Survival Guide, I emphasize that empath children feel too much but don’t know how to manage the sensory overload. They see more, hear more, smell more, intuit more, and experience emotions more.

For instance, they may not like strong food smells in the kitchen, perfumes, harsh bright lights (particularly fluorescent bulbs), or loud talking. They prefer soft (not scratchy) clothes, beauty, nature, and having one or a few close friends rather than many acquaintances.

Their sensitivities can get assaulted by our coarse world, and this affects their behavior. Since most empathic children can’t articulate the cause of their upset, enlightened parents can help them identify triggers and offer the solutions.

As parents, you need to know child empath signs, and identify what overstimulates your empathic children and avoid those activities so you can learn how to raise empathic children. Doing so calms them and wards off exhaustion, tantrums, and anxiety.

Common triggers include excessive busy-ness such as overscheduling their day without breaks, multi-tasking, no alone time, and violent television programs or newscasts, especially at night. Following exposure to any of these personality factors, children might find it harder to fall asleep and require more downtime before bed to unwind. (Sensitive children may take longer to calm down at night than other children since their systems are slower to transition from stimulation to quiet). 

Also, additional child empath signs include empathic children feeling and absorbing other people’s emotional discomfort, especially from parents and close friends. Because they are “super-responders” their hurts cut deep and their joys are extra-joyous.

Empathic children don’t have the same mechanisms as non-empath children to screen out light, noise, and the chaos of crowds, for example at large sports events. Cheering, clapping, and booing can feel jarring, even painful, to them. Nor do they respond well to loud music, honking, hammering or power tools. These sounds agitate them as opposed to the peaceful effect of birds chirping, water elements, or gentle wind chimes. Empathic children may cry more and cope by retreating into solitude to self-regulate sensory overload.

Typically, society or schools don’t give these exceptional children much understanding. Conventional physicians and teachers often label them as “shy,” “antisocial” or “fussy,” or they’re diagnosed with social phobia, an anxiety disorder, or depression.

In addition, they may be quieter, thoughtful, deep, and gentle rather than highly verbal or assertive, which others can perceive as withdrawn. Because of these misconceptions, your role is critical in supporting their sensitivities, intuition, creativity, wisdom, and in teaching them tools to cope with the world.

As an empathic child, I received no support from my physician-parents about my sensitivities — not because they didn’t love me, but because they didn’t know what an empath was and they were never taught how to understand my special needs.

They wanted me to be happy, but they didn’t think encouraging my sensitivities would lead me there. They called me “overly sensitive” and said that I needed a “thicker skin.” These “helpful” comments made me believe there was something wrong with me. Because I felt misunderstood and invisible as an empathic child, I have become especially passionate about educating parents about raising their empathic children.

Knowing that your child is an empath is the first step toward bringing out the best in him or her. Then you can support your son’s and daughter’s sensitivities as an expression of their excellence, compassion, and depth.

To determine if your child is an empath, take the following child empath signs into consideration. Only then can you learn the tools for how to raise empathic children:

  1. Does he or she feel things deeply?
  2. Does he or she get over-simulated by people, crowds, noise, or stress?
  3. Does he or she have strong reactions to sad or frightening scenes in books or movies?
  4. Does he or she want to escape and hide from family gatherings because there’s too much going on?
  5. Does he or she feel “different” than other kids or complain about not fitting in?
  6. Is he or she a good listener and compassionate with others?
  7. Does he or she surprise you with intuitive comments about others or yourself?
  8. Does he or she have a strong connection to nature, plants, animals, or stuffed animals?
  9. Does he or she require a lot of time alone rather than playing with other kids?
  10. Does he or she take on a friend’s stress or upset?
  11. Does he or she take on your own or other people’s emotions or stress—and act out when you’re angry, upset or depressed?
  12. Does he or she have one best friend or a few good friends rather than a large social network?

Here’s how to score this assessment:

  • 9-12 yesses indicate this child has extremely strong empathic traits
  • 6-9 yesses indicate strong empathic traits
  • 4-8 yesses indicate moderate empathic traits
  • 1-3 yesses indicate some empathic traits
  • Zero yesses indicate that the child is not operating primarily as an empath. 

Empath children are precious beings. No matter where your child is on this spectrum, he or she would benefit from being taught to honor his or her specific sensitivities.

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Adapted from The Empath’s Survival Guide: Life Strategies for Sensitive People by Judith Orloff MD.

Judith Orloff, MD is the author of The Empath's Survival Guide: Life Strategies for Sensitive People. Dr. Orloff is a psychiatrist and an empath who combines the pearls of traditional medicine with cutting edge knowledge of intuition, energy, and spirituality. She is on the UCLA Psychiatric Clinical Faculty also specializes in treating empaths and highly sensitive people in her private practice. To learn more about Dr. Orloff’s book tour schedule, and to sign up for her Empath Support Newsletter visit www.drjudithorloff.com.

This article was originally published at Psychology Today. Reprinted with permission from the author.