Episode Details

Back to Episodes
ADHD & Empathy with Dr. Tamara Rosier

ADHD & Empathy with Dr. Tamara Rosier

Season 28 Episode 10 Published 2 years ago
Description

In this week's episode of The ADHD Podcast, hosts Pete Wright and Nikki Kinzer explore the nuances of empathy for those with ADHD. Their guest, Dr. Tamara Rosier, recently presented on "The Unexpected Downside of Empathy" at the 2023 International ADHD Conference. Dr. Rosier, founder of the ADHD Center of West Michigan, explains that while empathy is often seen as a virtue, ADHDers may experience it in a more complicated way.

Dr. Rosier outlines three main types of empathy: emotional, cognitive, and compassionate. Typically, employing all three types leads to well-regulated empathy. However, she notes that ADHDers frequently operate at extremes, either overly empathetic or non-empathetic. This imbalance leaves them vulnerable to several "downsides" of empathy.

First, ADHDers may experience misplaced empathy, making excuses for other's inappropriate behavior. Second, getting stuck in emotional empathy can lead to empathetic distress and fatigue from taking on too many others' burdens. Dr. Rosier hypothesizes this stems from the ADHDer's desire to avoid rejection sensitivity.

Third, ADHDers may underfunction by shutting down empathetically. Fourth, they may overfunction by overcompensating for other's lack of empathy. Finally, manipulative people can exploit the ADHDer's emotional empathy to gaslight without triggering their cognitive empathy.

ADHD wiring leads to a complicated relationship with empathy. Our great thanks to Dr. Rosier for sharing her insights this week!


Links & Notes

  • (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
  • (02:43) - Introducing Dr. Tamara Rosier
  • (04:42) - What is Empathy?
  • (24:06) - Empathetic Trust
  • (30:34) - Grief
  • (34:28) - Underfunctioning Empathy
  • (37:52) - Overfunctioning Empathy
  • (39:32) - Empathy & RSD
  • (41:32) - Finding Balance
  • (48:10) - The Genesis of the New Book
★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us