Empathy is one of the driving forces in a therapeutic relationship that happens between a massage therapist and their client.
Empathy is the ability to understand others in a deeper sense not only in acknowledging their pain or discomfort but actually taking it a step farther and sharing that pain with others. This requires that you have a deep understanding of yourself and be able to process the feelings that arise in you when you are dealing with someone who is in pain and not necessarily act in the way that the feeling pushes you to act.
Being able to stay present with the other person is one part of empathy. Our ability to provide empathy for another begins with being able to be empathetic with ourselves. If we don’t receive the empathy we need at an early age from others we begin to get an distorted view of who we are. If you laugh and no one laughs with you or if you cry and people tell you to get over it or grow up, you learn to stop expressing those feelings. As children we have no way of knowing what that it is ok to express those feelings. We start behaving in ways to please others rather than expressing our truth – our true self. When our feelings have been discounted at an early age, we begin don’t learn how to soothe ourselves and nurture ourselves. We don’t learn to vaulue ourselves.
Arthur Ciaramicoli and Katherine Ketchan in their book “The Power of Empathy” says
“We mirror back the neglect and inattention we were given and our focus remains on our own unmet needs and desires.”
The thing is that we often bring those unmet needs to the massage table and use the client to get them met in one way or another. Massage therapists who talk about their problems or do massage because they need to feel needed and validated as a person risk develping co-dependent relationships with a client that do not foster healing unless you can get to the other side of the codependence. Always wanting to give advice and be the expert takes away from the client’s ability to heal themselves. Fixing others takes the power away from the client.
The thing with empathy is that the only way we can get it from someone else is to first be empathetic towards others so that they can get the nurturing they need and give it back to you. This often requires going through a process of acknowledging the fact that you have been deeply hurt by not getting your needs met and learning to grieve the loss. It requires that you learn to provide empathy to yourself so that you can hold on to yourself more while others come to you in a state of neediness. It requires becoming more self aware and being able to see how you project these unmet needs on others.
It is a process of developing self esteem and learning to care for yourself in a deeper way than you ever thought. The book “The Power of Empathy” has some suggestions for practicing empathy. It requires that you learn honesty, humility, acceptance and gratitude among other things.
Joining or starting your own peer supervision group is a great way to learn more about giving empathy and receiving empathy.

