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The Case for Empathy - Empathy gets talked about a lot. Practiced? Not nearly as much. In this episode, I make The Case for Empathy—not as a soft ideal or a social media slogan, but as a daily discipline. One I work at imperfectly. One I believe matters deeply. And one I’m trying to model for my kids in real time. This isn’t a sermon. It’s a reflection from the middle of the work. We explore why empathy is hardest precisely when it’s most needed, how easy it is to harden when we’re tired or overwhelmed, and why choosing curiosity over certainty is a form of strength—not weakness. Along the way, I draw on unexpected teachers: Inside Out and what it gets right about sitting with sadness, “Lean on Me” and the power of simply standing with someone, and Ted Lasso as a case study in empathy as leadership. I also talk about the other side of the equation—what it feels like to receive empathy at the right moment, and how those moments have been stabilizing, grounding, and, at times, life-changing. If you’ve felt yourself getting sharper, quicker to judge, or slower to care—or if you’re trying to model something better for the people watching you—this conversation is for you. Empathy isn’t automatic. It isn’t free.
But practiced consistently and imperfectly, it can steady us—and the world around us.