OddFiction wrote:
Sympathy: Understanding another person's thought or feelings. Having compassion for them. Caring for their state of (emotional?) mind and wishing them better if applicable.
Empathy: Responding to another person's mood or state by experiencing feelings of the same sort. Imagining yourself as 'being like they are' for the moment.
Which would you say more accurately describes you?
I wonder if the ASD tests should be sypathizing quotient rather than empathizing quotient?
Your definitions are backwards. "Empathy" means understanding someone's feelings. "Sympathy" is actually feeling the same things at the same time. If someone experiences the death of a close friend of family member and they cry, you cry with them. That's what sympathy is.
Empathy is a kind of buzz word that has entered pop psychology and motivational speaking. It recognizes that a person's feelings or anxiety or grief are personal. You can't "know how someone feels" because you aren't that person. You CAN, however, do things like repeat what someone says about their feelings in paraphrase, gauge their response, ask questions, reword your responses, and such things to show a grieving person that either you DO understand what they are going through or that you are at least trying to understand.
In general, aspies tend to be "fix-it men." We don't see through the emotional side of an issue, alleviating grief through being present and helping someone talk through their problems. If someone is sad because their dog died, for instance, we're more likely to suggest they just go to the local animal shelter and get a new puppy. We mean well, but sometimes such suggestions are more horrifying than helpful to those we are attempting to counsel. That's why we are often accused of lack of empathy. We don't understand, in part because we don't get the social cues of pain. We are probably more often sympathetic, we just typically don't know how to show sympathy or empathy.
I think a better question is why do we confuse the two terms? You defined them as most people tend to misunderstand them, but that is NOT what "sympathy" and "empathy" mean.