My Weird Prompts
What kind of person can interrogate a terrorist or tell a parent their child has six months to live — and still go home functional? This episode explores the counterintuitive psychology behind professions that demand deep engagement with human suffering without absorbing it. We look at how interrogators, forensic therapists, pediatric oncologists, and war correspondents develop "empathic regulation" — the ability to use empathy as a cognitive tool without letting it trigger a full physiological response. The answer isn't coldness or detachment; it's a specific kind of controlled caring that most people can't sustain.
200 episodes
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