Kil Tyme wrote:If a child or girl, sure a desire to comfort. If a dude's bawlin, then he's on his own...and he know's he is, which makes him bawl even more.


So true!
Seriously though:
In the case of someone I know - or, more accurately, someone I care about (since there are many people I know and care nothing for) - I feel an urge to comfort. Among my close friends, I am The Listener.
In the case of a stranger, I feel the urge to leave. I don't think it's lack of empathy; I think it's reverse empathy. I can deal with just about anything alone. If I'm uspet, I will get over it alone; indeed, I tend to find if I'm getting sympathetic noises etc from people, I can't recover and pull myself together until they've gone away. Also, I tend to detest being asked if I'm ok. So basically I feel the urge to avoid sobbing strangers because 1) my reverse empathy tells me they're better off if I leave them to it, and 2) I don't really care, and I can't be doing with manufacturing an artificial shoulder to cry on.
Children are a different matter. I feel the urge to comfort a crying child, whether familiar or a stranger, as long as they seem genuinely distressed. If the little brat is clearly just squalling for attention, it's on its own. Having said that, I, like Cail, would never,
never approach an unknown child. I have known stepfathers be reported to Social Services / the police for hugging stepchildren. There is no way in hell I'm taking that chance.
So I, too, disagree with SRD's conclusions. My level and type of emotional reaction varies, and is sometimes nonexistent, but I nonetheless always cite the Chronicles as the finest work of fiction I've ever read.