Habit 3:
Seek experiential adventures
So you think ice climbing and hang-gliding are extreme sports? Then you need to try experiential empathy, the most challenging – and potentially rewarding – of them all. HEPs(highly empathic people) expand their empathy by gaining direct experience of other people’s lives, putting into practice the Native American proverb, “Walk a mile in another man’s moccasins before you criticise him.”
The writer George Orwell is an inspiring model. After several years as a colonial police officer in British Burma in the 1920s, Orwell returned to Britain determined to discover what life was like for those living on the social margins. So he dressed up as a tramp with shabby shoes and coat, and lived on the streets of East London with beggars and vagabonds. The result, recorded in his book Down and Out in Paris and London, was a radical change in his beliefs, priorities, and relationships. He not only realised that homeless people are not “drunken scoundrels” – Orwell developed new friendships, shifted his views on inequality, and gathered some superb literary material. It was the greatest travel experience of his life. He realised that empathy doesn’t just make you good – it’s good for you, too.
We can each conduct our own experiments. If you are religiously observant, try a “God Swap”, attending the services of faiths different from your own, including a meeting of Humanists. Or if you’re an atheist, try attending different churches! Spend your next holiday volunteering in a village in a developing country.
Next time you are planning a trip, don’t ask yourself, “Where can I go next?” but instead “Whose shoes can I stand in next?”