Psychiatry & Psychotherapy Podcast - Empathy in Therapy: Mastering Empathic Engagement with Dr. Douglas Flemons
Episode Date: February 20, 2026In this episode, Dr. Puder engages in a profound conversation with Dr. Douglas Flemons, a seasoned marriage and family therapist and author of the newly released Empathic Engagement in Clinical Practi...ce. Drawing from over 30 years of supervising family therapists, Dr. Flemons redefines empathy as an active, pursued skill rather than a passive feeling, distinguishing it sharply from sympathy. Explore common misconceptions, the pitfalls of sympathetic responses, debates on cognitive versus affective empathy, the role of microexpressions and universal affective states, and practical strategies for building genuine therapeutic connections without imposing interpretations or judgment. By listening to this episode, you can earn 1.25 Psychiatry CME Credits. Link to blog Link to YouTube video
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All right, welcome back to the podcast. I am joined today with Dr. Douglas Flemens. He is a marriage and family therapist, later got his PhD. He taught for 30 years marriage and family therapy, family therapy. He has worked actively with topics like suicide. And today we're going to be talking about a recent book he wrote, empathic engagement in clinical practice. So, yeah, welcome to podcast.
Thanks for inviting me. Delighted to be here.
So I understand you're in North Carolina now?
Yeah, at the moment, I'm in South Florida,
because it's very cold in North Carolina.
But, yes, I live in Asheville.
Okay, where in South Florida are you?
In Fort Lauderdale.
Oh.
When I was teaching at the university, we lived here,
so we're just back visiting friends and getting work.
Wonderful.
So tell me some misconceptions on what empathy is
and how you define it.
Maybe we could start there.
A lot of people conflate empathy and sympathy,
and that's not just run-in-the-mill-lay people,
but researchers, theoreticians,
they don't have any clear way of distinguishing between them,
and so they use them interchangeably often.
And that runs you into some trouble
when it comes to trying to engage empathically with your clients.
If you approach it from a sympathetic mindset,
you can find yourself in a world of,
I don't know, world of hurt,
but a world of complication.
I feel sorry for people that find themselves in a world of complication.
Right. Feeling sorry for is a sympathetic response.
You feel bad and you feel bad along with them
and then you then feel bad for the fact that they feel that way.
So that lands you in the world of sympathy.
And it's something that comes to us naturally as humans.
We're wired in such a way that if,
you're demonstrating pain and I'm close with you or I care about you or you're important to me,
then my brain's going to fire in very similar ways to what's happening to you.
And that's just automatic.
That's sympathy, but that's not empathy.
Empathy doesn't happen to you.
Empathy is something you pursue.
Yeah, I think that often when people experience sympathy from others,
you know, they're experiencing it from friends.
It can feel almost weighty for me sometimes to have sympathy from friends
because then I feel like, oh, I'm making them feel bad and sorry.
And I'm feeling then bad for their experience of sorriness.
Yeah, so it can become sort of this ricochet effect.
You feel bad, they feel bad for you now, you feel bad that they feel bad,
now they feel bad that you feel bad about them feeling bad about you feeling bad.
That can get pretty twisted.
But it's also, there's a quality, I don't know if this happens to you,
but if somebody feels bad for me, it somehow diminishes me.
Oh, you poor thing.
It puts me in the victim place, right?
I'm a victim.
And I think that happens kind of naturally because we have a sympathetic response
for people who have had unfortunate experience.
So if you're helpless or hapless, it's easier for the person to have sympathy for you
than if they think that you're responsible for whatever negative experience you're having at the moment.
So the feeling of sympathy automatically imbues the person with some quality of helplessness, haplessness.
Souttless.
Souttly.
Yeah.
And so that if you're the recipient,
of that, you mentioned a victim.
Victims have no agency.
So if you're the subject or the receiving end of sympathy,
there's a quality that your agency has been diminished or stolen from you
in that quality of emotional connection.
Yeah.
But what if the person's empathic experience of themselves
or the experience that they're having is one of a victim?
and, you know, like I feel like I am a victim.
The world is all against me.
So I can have a sympathetic response,
oh, David, you poor thing for feeling like a victim.
So that's certainly possible.
But an empathic understanding of that doesn't have me feeling bad for you.
It has me exploring the intricacies and the complexities
of how it is that you're orienting to the world
with that kind of belief system.
Do you think it's helpful to split empathy up
into like cognitive empathy or affective empathy?
I see these kind of differentiations in the research,
compassion and empathy being the third one.
Yeah.
It's a very common division in research,
cognitive and affective.
I'm a big fan of Lisa Feldman Barrett's work on Constructed Theory of Emotion.
And she makes the point in a bunch of different writings that there's no such thing in the brain as an affectless cognition.
You can't have pure rationality.
In logic, it lives there.
In philosophy, there's this idea of we're going to champion rationality.
over
emotionality.
But at the level of brain function,
she says you can't locate a thought
that doesn't have an affective connection to it.
And an emotion, she says,
is a category of experience.
So it's feeling,
it's affect,
but there's a cognitive spin
that is placed on that affect.
in order for it to be recognized and felt as an emotion.
So that division between affect and cognitive empathy
is a after effect, a downstream after effect,
of that kind of split.
But if the brain doesn't operate that way in the first place,
then I think the division doesn't make as much sense.
So I think of it as instead of affect,
empathy, cognitive attenuated empathy. That is, there's not a hell of a lot of cognition going on,
but it's not absent. And same thing, cognitive empathy being affective attenuated empathy.
There's still a affective quality in it. So I don't find an incredibly useful distinction.
Okay. So when you kind of subscribe to her line of thinking, you know, do you think that there are emotions as like universal experience across humans, animals, you know?
No. So universal affective states or universal ability to get ramped up and to have a positive or negative valence to the,
that arousal, absolutely. But the defining of an emotion is a social act. It's a psychological
act. And you can have the same affect of arousal with a different contextual orientation to it,
and it shows up either as fear or as excitement.
Yeah, I think I differ from her.
I think that micro expression is a real thing.
I kind of think that, especially with the congenitally blind studies where they look at congenitally blind individuals, you know, that are flashing very similar emotions to people that were born sighted.
You know, I think there's a universal expression of emotion.
Now, we may not be very accurate at reading the emotion.
And the person who has the flash of emotion may not be very accurate in describing their emotion.
For example, people with psychosomatic illness or lexathymia.
But I kind of differ from her in that perspective.
And I would look also to John Gottman's work where they looked at microexpression in newly married couples
and then we're able to predict months of separation later.
They predict physical illness in the couples just by looking at microexpression
and recording how much different couples flashed on their relationship.
face. I don't if you've seen that study. But I think that validates this idea that there is,
there is universal expression of emotion. And I tend to differ from her in that perspective,
but that we may be. Maybe. And I'm, I would be waiting into an area that I don't have expertise
because I'm benefiting from her research. I certainly didn't participate in, in creating it.
But there is a point, maybe just make one point. The idea that, um,
micro-expression of an inner emotion. So you've got this shows up on the face or in some kind of
gesture of an emotion that's inside. So there's this coordinated communication between the two
implies that the emotion is there and then it's expressed. But so much about human experience
has this recursive foldback quality to it. So the identification of what
it is that your feeling contributes to the feeling itself.
And I see this a lot working with people with panic disorder.
They start to feel, and they go, oh shit, I'm starting to panic,
which then contributes to a greater release of the hormones that they're recognizing
in the first place that have them concerned.
And so there's this spiraling that happens, and a lot of it has to do with the way that they're
making sense of their experience.
Because of that
fold back recursive quality
to all experience,
I think it's unhelpful to distinguish,
try to distinguish between
here you have the pure,
as you're talking about,
here's the pure emotion,
and then here's the expression of it.
Everything is so intertwined.
It becomes very difficult
to talk about it
and make any kind of coherent sense.
So the way that I understand
what,
I don't know if you've heard of this idea of like the second arrow,
whereas the first arrow is like, you know,
the person with panic has an initial, like, discomfort maybe in their abdomen.
The second arrow is the adding of meaning to that, right?
Like, oh, I'm having this discomfort in my abdomen.
I may have a panic attack and then they start to get more.
And then maybe they feel guilt, you know, that they're having this fear,
you know, so then they have like this, like the secondary type of things,
Right?
Secondary tertiary, yep.
Which I think that's like, that's not necessarily how I understand the usefulness
of micro-expression is, it's kind of a, that's like a separate category.
If you're interested, and I know we're kind of having a back-and-forth discussion here,
trying to learn how we each think and where we're starting from, here I'll show you a video.
So I videotaped people watching YouTube videos, and this guy is,
is watching a YouTube video.
And so this is the flash on his face.
And this is the classic flash
of micro-expression of anger, right?
Now, if I was to pause him right here
and to ask him what he was thinking or feeling,
he may not be able to tell me
that he was feeling anger.
He may say like, oh, man, that's awful what I was seeing.
Right. And if I was thinking about
being empathic towards him,
I wouldn't say, well, you're feeling anger.
Of course, right?
But the anger is like a signal to me that something is there, an emotion, right?
And so what I've seen since getting trained in microexpression, you'll see the flash,
and then they'll tell the story that proceeds.
And some of that, some of the feeling in that story could be frustration.
It could be anger.
It's complex, right?
Why are they feeling that?
Why do they flash that?
It could be a multiplicity of reasons.
I may not have access to that, right?
I mean, you can't read into, they may be frustrated that I said something, they may be frustrated
that, you know, their stomach is upset or they're hungry, you know. So I think that the flash of
emotion, it is a universal in my mind, expression of an emotion. What the meaning of that is,
is very differently described in different cultures by different people with different levels
of psychological awareness, people with Alexothymia have a lower.
understanding. So this
is my like contention with her research.
Well, I love how you said
I see something that shows up
and I don't yet know what it means.
You're confident
that it means anger, but as far as how that
plays out in his experience
and the story that's attached to it and so on,
you hold back from presuming.
I would
have a level of
confidence like I would if someone said a word
that that word is trying to describe something
internally inside of them. What it's describing or why it's
describing that is a puzzle and I'd have to be curious about it, right?
And this is where I think we might have some agreement
in kind of like the, for you,
for empathy is an active, imaginative, relational process, right?
And so I would never, if I said something, and they're like, no, that's not what I'm feeling,
I'd be like, okay, wow, thanks, help me.
Help me, like, understand what's going on.
So it's like, I'm not necessarily the authority on it, but it's helping me see a picture.
It's part of the picture.
We do meet there for you not to impose your authority and to argue with them.
No, no, no.
I saw the microaggression on your face.
you're definitely angry.
You just haven't got in touch with it yet.
For you to take that kind of position
to try to help them get in touch with something
that you're confident is there
and they're not yet aware of
would be an interactional, probably disaster.
They would then back away from you,
be concerned about how pushy you were, et cetera, et cetera.
for you to find it interesting, for you to hold it as a point of curiosity and perhaps to come back to it later,
terrific, including the possibility that you're seeing, whether with their words or what's showing up on their face,
some quality of experience that they don't seem to be in touch with, and you don't get ahead of them,
but over a period of time through conversation, they come to arrive at a recognition of,
of some level of anger or something,
that would be fine.
So you get organized by what you're noticing,
your expertise comes in being able to recognize patterns and so on,
but you don't impose it.
And I agree completely with that.
I think with my background,
I worked 10 years.
I ran this IOP partial program for people with psychosomatic illness.
So a lot of these patients come in and they're medicalized.
They're, you know,
They don't have depression or anxiety.
They experience all of their feeling in their body.
And so the curiosity that I've always had is,
how do I get it out of their body and into emotional language?
They have a lot of emotion when they talk about the frustration of the medical system
because it hasn't helped them.
And inevitably, they have a lot of disavowed emotion,
disavowed experiences of emotion.
They're not allowed to, maybe early on they weren't allowed to experience anger.
they weren't allowed to experience maybe a positive emotion.
So just to give you some context for why I'm interested in this.
Yeah, and have expertise.
So I would discover it a little bit differently.
They have something going on with their body.
They don't yet have a way of naming it.
And the expression, the way it expresses with somatic issues,
distresses them
and that if they can bring it into language
in conversation with Hugh
it has a way of creating meaning
that they didn't have access to at the beginning
and shifting the meaning
is shifting the possibility
of doing something different about it.
Yeah, yeah, I would agree with that.
It's a fascinating
field to think through.
Okay, so how did you get interested in empathy?
Maybe let's rewind here, like, what was the impetus to think about this for as long as it took to write this out?
Yeah, it took a long time.
Well, I originally encountered it in my master's program.
I was training counseling psychology and got the kind of typical entry into micro processes that would add up to empathy, active listening, and so on.
but it really showed up in my supervising over 30 years as a family therapist.
Family therapists don't generally talk about empathy at all.
We talk about joining with clients, but very little thinking about researching,
theorizing about empathy.
And so I was kind of an outlier, I guess, paying attention to it.
And what I noticed is my students could have a very clear theoretical understanding.
of what it was that they were supposed to be doing with their clients.
But if they couldn't figure out a way of connecting with them,
then their theory was for not.
And so I ended up with this, and I did live supervision.
So I'm behind a one-way mirror, six people on a team, six hours,
and we see a bunch of clients and wonderful supervision process.
Wow, that's incredible.
I started, yeah, I started focusing more on helping them have conversations
with the clients where the clients weren't having to protect themselves from the therapist,
either taking issue with the way the question is being asked or being shut down or whatever.
And so I ended up starting to talk a lot to my students about how to empathically connect
and figure out, so how do you do that so it doesn't backfire in your attempts to do it.
Yeah.
I had a similar experience with the residents.
So we watched video,
and I was one of the main educators at the university
for a number of years with a mentor who's now passed,
but he was 90 years old at the time and very experienced.
And so we'd watch videos of the residents interact with patients.
And it was like the micro moments of connection and empathy
were probably the things we talked about the most.
Wow, that's wonderful.
Yeah, like the patient says this,
and then what's the,
what's the accurate, like empathic thing that you can say afterwards, you know?
And in a medical setting, there's often an encouragement, at least, well, I don't know this directly,
so you would be a better authority, but from what I've read, Jody Halpern book on Empathy,
the training of doctors is how do you make sure that you don't get too emotionally caught up with your clients,
So you have a friendly bedside manner, but slightly removed.
So looking at empathy as a goal is, from what I've read, at least rather unique in medical education.
Yeah, I think that it's incredibly valuable.
And where I would be curious is like with Carl Rogers, like where do you align versus where do you part ways?
definitely a line with a lot he was so inspired to recognize the importance of for example
letting go of judgment and he didn't talk about it this way but i think a lot about the boundary
between therapists and clients and judgment is one of those boundaries so if you're my client i hold you
in judgment i think what you're doing is wrong for example then that judgment
gets in the way of me being able to be curious about you.
I already know something about you and I disagree with it
and so I'm back from you.
So Carl Rogers is saying non-judgment is the way to go
because when I'm not using that as a dividing technique,
I can get inside of the logic of your world.
Once I'm there, cool stuff happens.
And if I can communicate my growing up,
understanding of what it's like to be in your world, in your story of your life, you end up
recognizing in me someone that gets you and you no longer feel alone. And so he had that statement,
if you're understood, you're not alone. And that's such an incredibly important grounding for
therapeutic change. He also looked at, okay, so how do you actually unfold this? He, in
in conversation and recognizing empathy is something that you do.
It's a skill that can be developed.
He regretted later having focused so much on the skills
because then it became robotic in the way that people tried to train students
and how to do it and people trying to do it in a way that didn't feel human.
but the commitment to learning the capacity to empathize, totally on board, a place that I disagree with him.
And I think it comes out of his respect for clients as he saw a therapeutic encounter as being ideal if both the therapist and the client are open for change.
and that the most meaningful therapeutic moments were places where he was vulnerable along with the client,
and he was open to changing himself.
And he saw therapeutic changes, changing or altering personality, which I think is another thing.
I won't go there.
But anyway, this idea of mutual vulnerability I disagree with completely.
What do you believe?
that what our job is is to be available to clients
and that there's a necessary asymmetry to that.
It's not mutual.
That if I think that my way to be able to help you
embrace your vulnerability
is for me to show you my vulnerability,
that's the shape of a friendship.
That's how you and I build confidence and trust in each other.
you tell me something that happened to you that brought shame and I say, well, I can tell you
something similar. Here's something that happened to me. We, as friends, terrific. But as therapists,
if we try to use our own vulnerability as a joining mechanism, it creates a style of relationship
that puts our well-being at risk and puts the relationship at risk. Carl Rogers,
for example, ended up at some point working with a schizophrenic patient for a couple of years
very intensely and working empathically felt likely he was losing his mind.
And he came very close to, he had to get out of dodge because he was losing it.
And I think that comes from him attempting and honoring the humanity and his, his
commitment to equality
meant for him that he was then
in this position where he was at risk
of himself having
a loss of
sanity in order to be able to connect with this person.
I've been very curious about that story, yeah.
She ended up, he was seeing her
five times a week towards the end.
Yes, yeah.
And he's said in autobiographies,
I was going to bring this up actually.
he said things like I got to the point where I could not separate myself from hers I was on the edge of complete breakdown myself I had to escape right so so if you think of empathy as the loss of the boundary between you and the other person to my mind that's the shape of sympathy that's when you and I resonate with the same emotional valence and we don't even really bother distinguishing whose emotion is it and this is emotional
contagion that shows up a lot in situations like suicidal clusters and so on.
But that idea that in an effort to make the connection, we're erasing the differences between
us becomes, I think, incredibly dangerous.
The other version is, the one that I would offer instead, is the more vulnerable you are,
if you're my client, the more available I am.
So I'm not meeting you with vulnerability.
I'm meeting you with curiosity, with warmth, with exploration, with non-judgmental acceptance.
But I'm not positioning myself to demonstrate to you that I can be as vulnerable as you.
So, okay, so how does one keep a stance of empathic curiosity rather than presumption?
and when do you notice maybe that it goes into more of that
it's going into kind of less curiosity
well so that's an added
difficulty is to presume
that's you can have this
complementary positioning that I'm suggesting
and still be presumptuous
and still get yourself into a world of hurt by doing that
so I appreciate the question
You hold back from presuming to know by embracing your ignorance.
It's like what you said earlier.
You can see something flashing on the person's face.
You know that there's something going on,
and you don't yet know what it is,
and the way that you're going to find out
is not for you to confidently determine that you're going to go find out
what you already know is there,
but that you start a conversation and you start exploring.
So if you continue to embrace the idea that you are not the expert of the other person,
that they're the expert in your job in order to develop an empathic understanding
is to get inside the way that they make sense of their world
so you can make sense of it from inside.
You get there by continuing to check any kind of confidence that you have that you know.
you can keep your confidence in your expertise, sure, but not presuming that, okay, I'm already
three steps ahead of you and I know what's going on even though you don't. You hold that
presumptuous back. Yeah. I tend to think it's almost like sometimes in insecurity,
people hold due presumptions, right? And it's like out of the insecurity, I think we get more
rigid or we get more kind of caught up in our own experience. Think about like some of the
hardest clients it might be to enter into, and you talk about in the book, suicide, specifically
how you've noticed we can almost want to jump to a solution. We can want to jump to not be empathically
saying things to show people that we know how dire they feel internally. What would, like, can you
talk more about that? Can you put words to that, what you've seen? I know you've done some research
on suicide as well. So I'd, yeah.
So the broader point that you made, I absolutely agree with.
Holding to uncertainty is very, very difficult for everybody,
and therapists included.
So when somebody's potentially suicidal and we're not sure,
it creates it's unnerving, creates anxiety.
And there's this great desire to know
so that you then know, okay, so what's the next steps?
What are we going to do to help protect the safety of this person if that's necessary?
And so hanging out in uncertainty is incredibly uncomfortable.
And being able to tolerate uncertainty for an extended period of time
is a terrific skill to develop in order to be able to then not jump into the presumptuousness
of preemptively deciding whether this person is or isn't suicidal.
That requires you to be able to hold some sensibility of their desperation and their hopelessness
and to just swim around in it with them and then offer questions with the curiosity based on what you're coming to appreciate about their circumstances.
but not to rush into an early decision.
I mean, there's certainly sometimes, it's a slam dunk,
somebody comes in, and it's clear to them,
it's clear to you that they have no intention to continue to live.
So that's not what we're talking about.
But the gray zone conversations,
they have the idea that if they don't mention the word suicide,
then you're not going to get the machinations of the state going,
and so they just won't mention it,
but it's implicit in everything that they're saying.
Those gray zone conversations
require us to be able to hold on to our distress
and our uncertainty and just hang out with them.
I think it's very common as providers to feel fear
in the midst of that, right?
Like, what if this person does and their life?
Like, like, so I think, like,
our own experience of fear can kind of come into
making it harder to empathize.
How do you deal with that?
There's lots of things that can make it hard to empathize,
and you're absolutely right.
Fear is one of them.
The moment you're organized by your fear,
and fear isn't a bad thing.
If a person comes in and
the hairs on the back of your neck are going up
because of what they're saying or what's showing up on their face or whatever their indicators are,
that fear can help organize the curiosity, so you should pay attention to it.
One of the difficulties that my students would display is they would feel that fear
and then think that that was unprofessional,
just like feeling moved by someone that's desperately sad and tears welling up in their eyes
and feeling, I got to stop that because that's unprofessional.
So they're afraid for a client, and they're trying to shut down the fear.
Now their conversation is with themselves.
I've got to calm down.
I've got to relax.
If the conversation is with themselves, they're out of connection now, out of conversation
with the person.
So it requires being able to acknowledge that the fear is there,
makes sense that it would be there
and have it not get in the way
of a continued conversation and exploration.
Yeah, I think what you're describing
is kind of like that,
that the fear itself,
if we can approach that with a lack of judgment towards ourself,
compared to then if we judge ourselves
and then we're caught up in our own fear
and judgment of ourself.
And we're then more and more in our own experience
and it's harder and harder to empathize
with the other person's experience.
The judgment raises its head in both places.
Both the other person is doing something that concerns us,
that grosses us out, that upsets us, that offends us,
that kind of judgment gets in the way.
But then if we're looking at our own reactions and judging those,
that gets in the way and both block the empathic exploration.
of the person's experience.
Good.
Well, okay, so I was thinking,
so I would do a roleplay with you, okay?
And so I'm going to be a clinician
who has just met with a patient,
and it stirred up a lot for them, okay?
Because I think, you know,
we have a lot of mental health professionals here.
I imagine they feel some level of weightiness
with some clients.
So I was thinking, well, let's, let me create a scenario.
Maybe that could resonate with some of them.
Sure.
Okay.
Yeah, so, you know, after, I left this session with this guy,
and there was something about the session and this person that I was just like very,
I felt I was like almost in danger.
You felt something going on with him that worried you.
Yeah, yeah, and I don't normally feel this way necessarily.
And I don't know if it's like other things going on in my life right now,
but I think the main thing was that I was just like,
I don't know if like, I think this guy might want to hurt me almost.
And he didn't express anything directly towards that.
But I felt that so profoundly.
You started feeling like you weren't safe in the session.
Well, I didn't feel I was safe after the session.
Ah.
Ah, so that there's some sense that he would have it in for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On the way home or something.
Oh, I mean, I remember leaving my office, and I usually leave one door, but I left the other door.
Because I was thinking, like, okay, if this guy's been following my patterns, maybe I'll throw the patterns off.
But then I'm conscious of that awareness.
but that's like a very unusual awareness for me.
Very unnerving.
How early in the session?
Was this a first session?
Yeah, this was a first session.
So how early in the session were you getting the sense of that,
what, he knew something about you,
or that he had a particular axe to grind with you?
What was going on?
I think the way,
some of the content on how
just he
was very angry
but also
not very aware of the anger
I did very unhappy
with a lot of things in his life
a lot of prior people in his life
very very unhappy
but I've never
I left the session and I was just like
I should probably leave the other door.
Yeah.
So you got the sense that he was relating to his world very much from this position of anger
without really being able to recognize it in himself.
So it makes sense that he was also relating to you somehow in this angry mode.
What were you picking up on that your spidey sense was picking up on
the fact that he was angry at you?
There was some kind of challenging questions.
Like, I don't know, I don't know if therapy works.
I don't know if this is all bullshit.
Like, he kind of like, it's kind of like he both wanted someone,
but then also didn't want someone, if that makes sense.
He was challenging you?
There was some challenge, yeah.
There was a little bit of challenging, yeah.
And then how did you respond?
I tried to come back.
to like what were the goals that he was coming in for
and the things that he was hoping to accomplish
that he had already stated
and how like I think a lot of those are helped in a relationship
and not just like some self-help book
but I think yeah it actually um you know
since this happened like a week ago I've had like a nightmare
of like how to, like,
kind of like an intruder.
And this is very, I mean, there is a little bit of background to this,
you know, from my story, which you might have remembered that my,
my grandfather died by being mugged outside his office.
And so I wonder if that has anything to do with it, you know?
Like if, how much is it, how much is it my own stuff versus the patient's stuff?
it's kind of confusing to me.
Well, you're very aware that it's possible
in your effort to help people
to put yourself at risk.
You got your grandfather in mind.
Oh, there was also that therapist
that was murdered in my city actually
a couple weeks ago.
And so that was,
this is kind of been like in the news
and I've actually been doing some research
on therapists and psychiatrists and social workers,
mostly actually social workers,
who have been murdered by former clients.
And so I'm reading about this as well.
So I don't know how much that has to do with it.
So it's kind of, it's convoluted.
Like, am I, what is what I'm feeling
like an accurate depiction of my,
my danger with this person?
Right.
Is it accurate?
and your sensitivity from what you've read in the news in your own family history,
allowing you to be exquisitely sensitive to an accurate danger,
and then to what degree is that sensitivity heightening your concern about danger
beyond what it actually might be?
And it's really hard to figure out, how do I tell the difference?
Yeah, it's really hard to figure out.
It's really hard to figure out.
When you were actually having the conversation with him, were these concerns on your mind at all?
Were you aware of picking up on his angry countenance, his way of being?
There was a moment where I was actually, and I've never, you know, it's interesting because like we talk about countertransference in our therapy sessions together.
and I've never had the thought before
that this person might want to kill me
and I was actually worried
like, does this person have a gun on them?
That actually occurred to me in my, in this session.
Impossible, I would imagine at that point
for you to be able to continue the session
in any kind of productive way.
You're just concerned about your safety.
If you don't feel safe,
it's pretty much impossible then to undertake
any kind of therapeutic conversation.
I think from our work, I try to get curious,
like, huh, what is it about this guy
that elicits this reaction?
You know, like, what is it about,
like, am I kind of picking up something
that is kind of unsaid, a level of paranoia maybe
or some of this person's own internal world?
And so that's what I was thinking in session with.
happened I was like huh that this is very curious to me but then it comes out in my dream a lot more impactful
it comes out a lot more scary in in the dream that night where it's like oh there's a person out my
door with a gun you know it sounds like it sounds like when you're in the session you were able to
keep your professional identity informing your engagement and then in your dream at night it's more
that role of trying to figure out him
gets put to the side and it's just the raw fear
of that he could pose a risk.
Yeah, the raw fear, right? Yeah.
And it kind of jolted me awake too
with this like intensity
and this like, am I safe, you know?
Like, yeah.
What a fabulous question.
And so you saw him a week ago?
Did you schedule another session with him?
What's the status of the appointment?
Yeah, scheduled another session.
For when?
It was going to be next week.
Yeah.
And you're wondering whether or not to cancel?
I'm wondering whether or not
this is, yeah, I'm kind of wanting to flush out.
Like, is how much of this is just my circumstances in my life?
Or how much is this is a real paranoia
that I should be concerned about this person.
Well, you said that you had a unique reaction,
so this hasn't happened to you before?
You've seen lots of patience,
so having this concern,
this is the first time you've gone out at separate entrance?
It's the first time that you've had a nightmare?
I mean, I've had dreams
and I've had some nightmares about patients, you know,
but there's something about this that feels different, you know?
So your reaction can tell you a lot
about what it must be like to be in his interpersonal network,
what the people that he knows are living with.
Yeah.
I really appreciate the danger that he seems to bring into his relationships.
So the real question is, can you help him when your life is potentially at risk?
Yeah, and it's like, I feel guilty that I even have these internal thoughts.
Hmm. Hence the questioning and my only making this up because my grandfather was mugged outside of his office.
Yeah. Or the recent death of the therapist in town, right?
which I read the case on this therapist in town and you know this person had a prior history
of violence, a rape, this person was, you know, in jail for almost 20 years before released.
So this was this was like a historically violent sexual offender.
So that kind of helps me a little bit, you know, get my head around like, okay, like this client I saw
didn't have a history of any of that, right?
That he told me.
That he told you.
Yeah.
And you're the first practitioner in the practice to see him,
so no one else has had an eye on him?
No, no, no one else had an eye on him.
You saw him, sounds like if you're going out a separate entrance,
you saw him at the end of the day,
were you the only person in the office?
Yeah, so I think that the fear that I have, I don't know if this is going to be a good client for me,
but I also have a lot of guilt about not seeing them.
Like I feel like I need to be able to help everyone.
Yeah, it would be good for you to let go of that idea.
You're not going to be able to help everyone.
And you can't be helpful unless you feel safe.
physically safe, emotionally safe.
Wait, wait, so are we still in the role play?
Is this what you would actually say to a provider in this case?
Yes, absolutely.
Okay, so if you're a provider listening to this,
and you're a female or male,
and there's a client that you're seeing, right?
And you don't feel safe.
I would totally agree with you.
Like, you don't need to see this person.
I had a student once who was,
seeing a client because he, I guess you think he was a diversion process. He'd been caught
masturbating in public and he was sent to therapy instead of jail. So she's seeing him and she said
in this session he was starting to indicate masturbation and she was distinctly uncomfortable.
and she said, I didn't know what to do.
I didn't want to be his mother
and tell him to just stop it.
I didn't want to just ignore it.
I didn't know what to do,
and I don't know how to help him,
but I just don't feel comfortable.
Which, by the way, I'm thinking about the audience
of mental health professionals who are listening to this,
this is a good thing to think about,
how am I going to handle this type of situation?
Because it could happen, right?
You could have an autistic patient.
You could have, I mean, different types of things.
of patients at different levels of functioning, right?
This could potentially come your way.
So, okay, so what did you recommend?
I said, it seems to me you have three ways to go.
One is you refer him elsewhere, entirely legitimate.
You can't help them unless it feels comfortable working with them.
Second is you say, we're here to talk about masturbation, not to demonstrate it.
And so if it goes from talking about how that has impacted your life
and how you want to change public masturbation into you demonstrating it,
then we're going to stop the session.
And I get to decide when it's gone into that realm, not you.
And the third is you could utilize what's happening.
And so when he goes and reaches for himself,
and you get curious about what is it that impelled you just now to reach for and start masturbating in front of me?
Tell me what's going on for you right now.
And you could in the moment explore what was happening and make that perhaps therapeutically helpful.
But that could only happen if you felt safe.
And that, to my mind, would be best managed by somebody else being in the room with you.
So three options.
All fine, but your confidence and comfort come first.
And she said I picked door number one.
Okay.
So she made a referral, which I thought was entirely appropriate.
Yeah, I would be apt probably to recommend door number one.
Unless they had, I don't know, like what level of experience or comfort would be necessary to go through door number three, you know?
I think profound experience.
And it would be much easier if it wasn't a male-female kind of dynamic.
I think that for the sake of clarity with the podcast listeners,
like if it's a one-off counter-transference of like there's something about that that doesn't feel right,
you've got to listen to that, right?
And the one of the supervisors I had recently said
that they went immediately to Zoom only sessions
with this one person.
And that was one step that she felt comfortable with
because then she wasn't in the same room.
But I get very sensitive to people,
especially providers that feel a high degree of guilt
that they need to see everybody.
Whereas like if you're,
If you're feeling like this is, there's something really off.
Like, maybe for good reason.
You're feeling that.
Yeah, in the role play that you were doing with me,
the person nightmare,
I was listening very closely to that
because it's obviously something about what happened is spinning around
and sort of pay attention to that and honor it.
to honor any kind of emotional response,
not necessarily be shut down by it.
Like at the end, the roleplay character was worried
that perhaps the person was listening into our conversation.
So that level of fear is then getting in the way
of being able to think resourcefully about
what steps do I need to take?
Right, right.
And, you know, there's a thin layer
between insight into psychotic thoughts, right?
And actual psychotic thoughts
versus like if this is actually a helpful degree of paranoia, right?
Absolutely.
And so I'm playing around with that.
And I'm thinking also that the reason why I picked this specific story
is that you had a story in your book
that was very similar.
about a patient that elicited a lot of fear in you.
Can you tell me about that story?
This guy walks in to a clinic that I was,
I was a graduate student at the time he walks in.
We usually scheduled sessions, but I was around.
Office manager said, can you see him?
Yes, he walks in.
He has mirrored sunglasses on, never takes the sunglasses off.
And he says he's there because his wife left him,
and she said a precondition for me coming back as you're getting therapy.
So he says, I'm here.
to get therapy so that she'll come back.
And however many sessions it takes, however often it takes, I just want her back.
So we start to talk, and he mentions along the way,
when she does come back, I can't take it her leaving me.
This is not the first time she's left.
I can't take it.
It's not happening again.
And he made it very clear that if she came back and tried to leave again, he was going to offer.
And so I then got incredibly frightened that somehow my helping him was going to lead to her death.
And I said that out loud.
I said, I've got a problem.
I welcome the fact that you've come for therapy and I look forward to being able to help you.
But I recognize that if I help you enough so that she's willing to come back, it puts her life at risk.
And I'm not willing to do that.
said he leaned toward me conspiratorially and he said, hey, listen, don't worry, I won't tell
anyone I was here. Not even the cops. I feel very safe knowing that. Knowing that bit of
information makes me, oh, I feel very, I feel very reassured. There's almost like a projection that
you are going to be just like him in that, too. Like all people think like I do. All people think
as Machiavellian, as psychopathically, sadistically as I do, right? And so you're just another guy
that's thinking like I am. And you're like, uh, I don't know. My job is to be able to make sense
of the fact that that's how he sees the world, but not for me to adopt the same principles. Yes.
So I told him I couldn't continue to see him. Yeah. And I, and I, it's a long time ago, I don't think
that I did an adequate job of finding him an alternative.
What I did do is call women in distress
and let them know that if his wife was there,
that she needed to take care.
Okay.
But I could not be helpful because the stakes were too high
for the possibility of this woman dying.
Yeah.
I almost feel like it's reminiscent of the type of client
that comes in and says,
I really need Xanax because when I'm coming off of cocaine,
it helps me relax.
And I'm like, I can't be like complicit
in you using a drug that could end your life, right?
So it's like I can't be helpful in this.
You know, like I can help you if you want to get off cocaine,
but I'm not going to give you another controlled substance
to ameliorate the suffering of coming off of an illicit substance
on an ongoing basis.
But the empathic way into that, I agree 100% with what you said.
And if you present it that way, then you're just putting up a wall and saying,
look, I'm not going to be complicit in helping you in this way.
To deliver the same message empathically would be cocaine is providing excitement for you
or it's helping you cope in various ways.
I want to hear all about that.
And of course it ramps you up in a way that then you feel so frazzled
and you need something to be able to come down from it.
And good on you, Xanax is one way to do that.
If you were going to work with me,
we would look at a way where you didn't need the Xanax
and you didn't need the Xanax because you didn't need the cocaine.
Would you be interested in exploring that?
It's reminiscent.
I've been deep in the Epstein files.
And because I'm a psychiatrist, I look up things like,
the different drugs and see if they appear in the Epstein files.
There was a very lengthy description of the effects of GHB,
which is the date rape drug, date rape drug,
that a doctor was providing to Epstein.
And there's some level of like, like, yeah, ick in that, right?
There's like, no, that doesn't, that that's not something,
Yeah, anyways.
It's kind of on this, this, this, uh, this association that you gave of this guy trying to control
his, his, his girlfriend, right, to the point that she can't escape.
And I'm going to kill you this homicidal level of, of power, right?
If you do try to escape, like, I'm going to control you.
And I think that was kind of that sadistic vibe I got in a lot of the Epstein files.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There are limits to what we as therapists can offer.
If I had been able to provide an empathic response to this guy,
if I could rewind and redo it,
I would have said something to the effect of,
your wife obviously means the world to you,
and when she left you this last time,
it turned your world upside down.
If he agreed with that,
I would proceed with.
And so, of course, you're desperately thinking,
I've got to prevent her from ever doing this again.
And the one way that you know is to do it through threat and through violence,
prevent her from leaving.
If you were to continue to come here,
I would fully endorse the idea of your wife not having to leave again.
However, what we would do is we'd explore a way for you to make it safe for her to stay.
rather than for it to be unsafe for her to leave.
Yeah.
And I think that would be something that would get through
maybe some of the, like, you wouldn't get an incredibly negative reaction from him
because, you know, for the departure of like, no, I can't treat you.
Yes.
I was afraid to say I can't treat you that he would then,
I was worried that he had a gun.
in the session and I was worried that if I said I'm sorry I can't see you that he would then
be violent to me.
Yeah.
So being able to empathically connect with him so that it makes sense that I couldn't help him
so that he wouldn't then be in judgment against me, it was in part a way of keeping me safe enough
to help him be safe, which would help his wife be safe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think the other option with the person like that is to refer them to a higher level of care.
It'd be like, look, your level of care that you probably need at this point is more of like a partial level of care or an impatient even.
If you want to really overcome things, that's what I would recommend.
I don't think once a week is going to be the level of care that is really going to help you accomplish your goals of developing a new psychological toolkit to deal with.
these huge emotions that you're dealing with.
Yeah, and it comes back to what you said earlier,
having the wherewithal and the ability to say,
I can't help everyone.
So I'm going to refer you to somebody that has expertise
in an area that I don't.
Moving more to like this idea of vicarious trauma, right,
empathically and being immersed in people's stories
every day, day in and day out,
and the vicarious trauma that we kind of absorb
as mental professionals.
how does empathy help us or how do you supervise people in the midst of that?
Yeah, a great question.
So facing vicarious trauma, it's very human to then just try to not feel as a way to cope.
But that then leaves the practitioner numb and really not caring.
And that creates burnout, so that doesn't really help.
The alternative is to treat empathy, if you treat it as a skill for engagement, to then learn the skill of disengaging.
So to begin a session and explore a way into the sense and sensibility of the person's experience requires you to have a felt sense of what's going on.
It doesn't mean that you have to suffer in exactly the same way or to the same degree, but that you're
allowing your body to register what's happening with them and for them and your response to them
and all of that so that you're emotionally available in the process. And then at the end to come out
of that session and to be able to release that connection, to disengage. And that can be done through
mindfulness meditation techniques, doesn't have to take a long time, but to have a or
to have a kind of a ritual of entering into
and entering out of exiting from an empathic relationship
and to do that between every client, every patient throughout the day.
And then at the end...
What's your practice? What do you do?
At this point, it's now virtual.
It's all virtual.
Before it was in person,
but I do a lot of individuals, a lot of couples, some families.
Okay.
What is your practice?
between patients.
What do you do?
I take, oh, I see what you're asking.
I end the session, and before I begin case notes,
I turn toward my experience,
and I pay attention to what it is that I'm feeling,
what I'm noting, what I'm remembering,
and I'm releasing it.
I'm on an exhale, I'm just letting go.
So you do some deep breathing?
I actually don't do it with,
deep breathing, but I do pay attention to the release of carbon dioxide, and I have an imagination
exercise where I latch whatever it is that's going on physically for me to the carbon dioxide
and gets released, binds to the carbon dioxide and gets released. So I do that in my imagination.
Okay.
There's another practice that's related to the Tibetan Buddhist.
practice of Tonglin of being able to
taking what I'm feeling and then transforming it
into relief. So just allowing
the body to, instead of releasing what you're feeling
to have it transform and then when it gets released, it's being released
as a form of relief. It's another
imagination kind of exercise.
I'm always interested in what people are.
actually do to, and then what do you do on your time off to sort of decompress or, you know,
what have you found most helpful in your, in your career?
So the essence of meditation to have a focus, say on a breath focused meditation,
and then recognizing that that focus gets lost, something intrudes, something interrupts,
recognizing what is interrupted, letting it go coming back to the focus.
And that's really the meditation practice,
is always coming back to some point of focus by letting go of
or transforming some kind of interruption,
something that's stolen away your attention into a distraction
or a story or a memory or an anticipation or something.
It's always just coming back to that.
And so that is the same with empathy.
after disengaging, anything that brings me back into thinking about a client,
if it's useful, like I getting inspired, oh, I didn't recognize something I didn't pick up at the time.
Now something's occurred to me.
I'll write it down so that I've got it when I go back.
And then when I've got that, I then let it go.
And if something's eating at me, I pay attention to, is there something about this that I need to be paying attention to that it wasn't picking up?
and then once I've got that noted, then I let it go.
So I'm not ignoring intrusions, but I'm making use of them and then letting them go when I don't need them.
Then I do just a bunch of stuff that has got nothing to do with seeing clients.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think it's good to have things that are completely, completely different.
Can you ask what you do?
Well, life is full with kids right now, and so, you know, it's a good distraction from work when I'm, you know, go for walks with the kids, do play Minecraft together, stuff like that.
Wonderful.
And I love good food.
sometimes, you know, like one of my, just having a break midday and going to get some food, you know,
there's something about that that's just nice to kind of turn it off.
Sometimes to get angry at something else, you know, outside of like all the patient stuff,
like the Epstein files, kind of, it's a nice, nice distraction.
And, yeah, I mean, I do a lot of the podcast stuff, so I feel like that takes a lot of the extra time.
but I feel like I've gotten better at compartmentalizing that
to not take over too much of my evenings.
Wonderful.
Yeah, that's incredibly important
is to protect your non-work time.
Yeah.
Kids are great for ensuring that that happens.
Daddy, daddy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this is wonderful.
Anything kind of like as we kind of wrap up our time,
anything that's still lingering that you feel like
is a big point that we didn't even really
convey, but you want to make sure that you convey.
Yeah.
The demonstration of empathy is different than the claiming of it.
So a lot of people, practitioners,
attempt to reassure their clients that they understand,
oh, I get you, I understand.
I've had something similar that happened to me,
so I understand what you're going through.
and with all the cases that I've supervised,
I've never seen that claim go well.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Someone with more borderline characteristics
may jump on that and be like,
how dare you?
You have no idea what it's like.
How can you possibly understand?
That's right.
But then, you know what's funny is like,
I find AI, sometimes the chatbots will do that.
I completely understand what you're going through.
And my statement back to them is like,
you don't understand.
you're a stack of cold, hot GPUs in some factory in the middle of, you know,
and they'll be like, ah, ha ha, good one.
Yes, I am a hot stack of GPUs in a factory.
You're right.
Yes, so even when it's a wet, warm stack of neurons that is facing the client,
they're saying you have no idea what I'm going through is accurate,
because you truly don't.
But you can demonstrate your understanding, and if you're doing a good job, they're agreeing with you.
So you make a statement, you float an idea, they agree with you, you now know that you've got some empathic connection going on.
And when you're wrong, they correct you, and you stand corrected, you adapt, and you're building over the course of the conversation a tighter and tighter connection that's based on your developing through your curiosity and imagination and appreciation of what their experience is.
I think there's one part, if I can read, since I actually did an episode on The Bear.
We did a full breakdown of the psychology of Carmen and his mother.
So you wrote this portion where you go to season one, episode eight of the bear, and he's talking, I think, at AA.
And you write what he says, but then you write what you would empathically say to him.
So I think this might demonstrate what we're talking about here.
So you say, okay, so I'm going to, my name is Carmen.
My brother's an addict.
My brother was an addict.
And then you write, was an addict.
It takes a while for the reality of his death to sink in.
Carmen goes on, my brother could make you feel confident in yourself.
You said, he could build you up.
Carmen goes on, you know, like when I was nervous, I was scared.
I wouldn't want to do something.
He'd always tell me just to face it.
And you would say back,
you just knew he had your back.
So it goes on.
It's long, but you get,
my listeners will kind of get the gist of it.
But a lot of good practical thinking through
of how to, I like how you said that.
You state the empathically,
and you demonstrate it.
You demonstrate the understanding.
You don't say I understand.
And demonstrate not only in terms of the word choice, but the affect with which you say it.
My mentor Dr. Tar would say something like, you can understand it in part.
You can imagine in part, but you can never understand fully, right?
You can have a glimpse into their world.
You can seek to understand, right?
Yes, absolutely.
And that is the best we can do, and that's a lot.
It's that commitment to striving to understand that there's research that says clients feel more connected with therapists who attempt and fail to making a correct empathic statement than those that would claim that they understand.
So they appreciate the fact that we're doing a rest.
And then you also talk about, we didn't really talk about the both and empathizing, holding multiple perspectives.
Can you mention that briefly?
Yeah, so I've got this experience as a family therapist.
You've got two or more family members holding very different ideas, beliefs about the other and about what happened.
And family therapists get caught trying to be neutral, not side with one person against the other,
and often that can result in them being so bland that they don't connect with either.
The alternative, both and empathizing, is to be,
able to grab the essence of what one person is saying and say it back to them so that they agree
and then turn to the other person and do the same thing with them. And those two versions of
reality are at odds with one another and you hold both of them going back and forth between
them. So that each person feels like you get them even though they don't get each other.
And that becomes a conduit for developing a different relationship between them.
Some good reflectiveness there to be able to hold all parties, all the pieces of the family,
all their different, you know, to empathically immerse yourself in the varying viewpoints
and to see, yeah, there is a both-and there often.
But they can often miss each other in the midst of that, right?
They're in search of some ultimate truth.
If only can both agree that I'm right.
and you're wrong, then we can go on from here.
Each of them are sort of operating from that assumption.
And instead, what we're doing is saying there isn't one objective truth that we're in
search of.
We're going to honor the fact that you can profoundly disagree and have different versions
of reality.
And my job is to make sense of each of them, not to be a judge as to which one's right.
So good.
Well, Dr. Fleming, it's been a pleasure.
I think we should probably wrap it up here.
do you have like a website or are you on social media or where would you point people
towards if they want to learn more about what you have to offer?
Yeah, I have a website, context consultants.com.
Okay.
And we'll put that in the show notes.
Great.
Yeah.
Well, wonderful having you on.
So nice to meet you.
And we'll leave it there for today.
Lovely to meet you.
And thanks for the great conversation.
