What Nobody Tells You About Being an Empath
The Gifts, The Traps, and the Moment You Finally Choose Yourself
I didn’t know I was an empath until a few years ago.
I didn’t know what narcissism was until I was 40. I grew up Catholic — surrounded by religion, but never spirituality. And those are two very different things.
My father didn’t teach me much. But in not teaching me anything, I learned everything. Pattern recognition. Intuition. The ability to see where things were going before anyone else could. I just didn’t have names for any of it yet.
Growing up, there was something inside me that was hard to explain. A knowing. I thought it was common sense — I assumed everyone felt it. But I was too busy watching everything around me to stop and question it.
Observing. Taking notes. Storing the stories.
I watched my family dynamics, my parents’ relationship, my friendships unfold like scenes in a movie playing in my head. When it came time to predict something I didn’t even frame it as a prediction. I would just blurt it out like I already knew.
And no matter how many times I didn’t want to be right — I was right.
For most of my life I was the single one. Always surrounded by people in relationships, never in one myself. And it never bothered me. I never went looking. My school of thought was always: when it’s meant to be, it will be. In the meantime — I’m going to do my thing.
So I watched. I learned. I absorbed.
And when friends came crying about their relationships — I jumped in. I listened. I gave advice. I organized the cottage weekend, the trip, the hike. I thought that was helping. What I didn’t realize was that every time I made myself that available, I was leaking.
They would come to me depleted and leave full. And I would be left having absorbed their pain, carried their weight, solved their problem — only to become invisible the moment things got better. No one asked about me. No one wondered how I was doing. No one called when there was no crisis.
I was filling the emotional void their relationships couldn’t fill. And I called it friendship.
The moment I heard my own thoughts say “here we go again — same problem, different situation” was the moment everything shifted.
I realized I was recycling the same advice over and over. And I was experiencing in my friendships exactly what my friends were experiencing in their relationships. Giving everything. Getting very little back. That was my wake up call.
Here’s what I understand now that I didn’t then.
Empaths can observe. We can know. But we cannot interfere — and not just because it drains us. Because it actually takes away the very experience the other person needs in order to grow.
My availability was keeping people from facing what they needed to face. The moment I stepped back, I stopped being a soft place to land and started being a mirror. And a mirror is far more useful than a crutch.
The shift from helper to teacher is everything.
Now I watch differently.
I sometimes have to remind myself that I’m watching someone’s life unfold like a movie. I can see based on the patterns exactly where it’s going — but I have to stand back. Take my commercial breaks. Come back with fresh eyes.
Because every movie teaches you something when you watch it from a distance. It’s only when you’re in it that everything goes foggy.
So I watch. I root for them. I hope it ends well.
And in the meantime — I keep choosing myself.
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