The Compassion Balance: Understanding the Interrelation of Self- and Other-Compassion for Optimal Well-being

Sahdra, B. K., Ciarrochi, J., Fraser, M. I., Yap, K., Haller, E., Hayes, S. C., Hofmann, S. G., & Gloster, A. T. (2023). The compassion balance: Understanding the interrelation of self- and other-compassion for optimal well-being. Mindfulness, 14, 1997–2013. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-023-02187-4

In plain language

Being kind to yourself and being kind to others usually go together — but do they for everyone? This study asked whether the well-known benefits of compassion depend on what the authors call “self-other harmony”: the degree to which, moment to moment, a person’s compassion for themselves rises and falls together with their compassion for other people.

Using experience sampling, 154 patients with a variety of diagnoses reported their self-compassion, compassion for others, life satisfaction, and mood on their devices six times a day across 42 time points, capturing compassion as it played out in real daily life rather than in a one-off questionnaire. For most people, self- and other-compassion were positively linked. But there was substantial variation between individuals, and at least 19 people showed the opposite pattern: when their self-compassion went up, their compassion for others went down. Standard statistical models that average across people effectively hid these individuals.

Crucially, harmony mattered for well-being. Higher compassion was associated with higher well-being only among people whose self- and other-compassion moved in harmony. For those whose two forms of compassion were unrelated or in conflict, compassion levels were largely disconnected from well-being. The findings argue for personalised compassion interventions: raising compassion will help most people, but for a minority, clinicians may first need to explore how the person interprets self- and other-compassion and help them find the balance that works for their well-being.

Key findings

How to cite

APA

Sahdra, B. K., Ciarrochi, J., Fraser, M. I., Yap, K., Haller, E., Hayes, S. C., Hofmann, S. G., & Gloster, A. T. (2023). The compassion balance: Understanding the interrelation of self- and other-compassion for optimal well-being. Mindfulness, 14, 1997–2013. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12671-023-02187-4

BibTeX

@article{sahdra2023compassion,
  author  = {Sahdra, Baljinder K. and Ciarrochi, Joseph and Fraser, Madeleine I. and Yap, Keong and Haller, Elisa and Hayes, Steven C. and Hofmann, Stefan G. and Gloster, Andrew T.},
  title   = {The Compassion Balance: Understanding the Interrelation of Self- and Other-Compassion for Optimal Well-being},
  journal = {Mindfulness},
  year    = {2023},
  volume  = {14},
  pages   = {1997--2013},
  doi     = {10.1007/s12671-023-02187-4}
}

Related work

Author: Joseph Ciarrochi (ORCID 0000-0003-0471-8100). Free copy hosted with permission for scholarly use. Please cite the published version via the DOI above.