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Learning empathy: Are modern students evolving emotionally?

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 21, 2025, 12:13 IST
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1/9

It’s a question a lot of people are quietly asking

Students today seem more aware. They talk about feelings. They know the language. Anxiety. Burnout. Boundaries. Words that weren’t common in school hallways not that long ago.
And yet, at the same time, something feels… flat.
Less reaction. Less surprise. Less visible excitement or disappointment. So what’s really going on here? Are students growing emotionally, or are they just tired?

2/9

They know more than ever

One thing is clear. Students today understand emotions better than past generations did at the same age.
They can name what they’re feeling. Or at least try to. They know when something isn’t okay. They’re quicker to notice stress, pressure, or unfair treatment. That’s not nothing.
There’s more talk about mental health. More openness. Less pretending everything’s fine when it’s not. And that’s progress.
But knowing the words doesn’t always mean feeling safe enough to fully feel the thing.

3/9

The overload is real

School isn’t just school anymore.
There’s pressure to do well, stand out, plan ahead, stay online, respond fast, and somehow still enjoy being young. All at once. Every day.
So emotions start stacking up. Stress on top of stress. Noise on top of noise. After a while, your brain does what it can to cope.
It numbs things.
Not because students don’t care. But because caring all the time hurts too much.

4/9

When feeling less feels safer

Emotional numbness doesn’t always look dramatic.
Sometimes it’s just not reacting. Not getting excited. Not getting upset either. Just kind of floating through the day.
For some students, feeling less feels safer than feeling everything. Disappointment hurts. Rejection hurts. Even excitement can lead to letdowns. So pulling back becomes a form of protection.
And from the outside, it can look like indifference. Like they don’t care. Like nothing matters.
But that’s rarely the full story

5/9

The role of screens

Screens play a part here. A big one.
Students are constantly exposed to news, opinions, drama, and other people’s emotions. All the time. There’s barely a break.
When you see everything, you start reacting to less.
Scrolling past bad news. Laughing at things that would’ve shocked you before. Watching emotional moments without actually sitting in them.
It trains the brain to keep moving. To not linger. To not feel too deeply for too long.
And that adds to the numbness.

6/9

But they’re not empty

Here’s the important part. Students aren’t emotionally empty.
The feelings are still there. They just come out differently. Sometimes in bursts. Sometimes in private. Sometimes late at night when everything finally slows down.
They care deeply about fairness, identity, friendship, and the future. They feel things intensely. They just don’t always show it the way adults expect.
And when they do show it, it can come out messy. Anger. Withdrawal. Silence. Humor that hides a lot.
That’s not emotional failure. That’s emotional overload.

7/9

Evolving in a tough environment

So are students emotionally evolving?
In many ways, yes. They’re more aware. More open to talking. More willing to question unhealthy norms.
But they’re also navigating a world that asks too much and pauses too little.
Emotional growth doesn’t happen in constant survival mode. It needs space. Safety. Time to process.
Without that, even the most emotionally intelligent person can shut down.

8/9

What actually helps

Students don’t need lectures about being tougher or more grateful.


They need space to feel without being judged. To be quiet without being labeled lazy. To care deeply without being told they’re too sensitive.


They need adults who listen instead of immediately fixing. Who notice the difference between numbness and apathy.


And they need reminders that it’s okay to feel deeply in a world that often feels overwhelming.

9/9

So, which is it?

Students aren’t choosing between emotional evolution and emotional numbness.


They’re doing both.
They’re learning the language of emotions while also protecting themselves from overload. They’re growing, but under pressure. Feeling more, while showing less.
And if that seems confusing, that’s because it is.
They’re not broken. They’re adapting.
And with the right support, patience, and understanding, those muted emotions can find their way back to the surface. Slowly. Safely. In their own time.

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