High
You stay cool when others heat up, take risks that make people wince, and aren't easily slowed by guilt or someone else's distress. At its best this reads as boldness, composure, and nerve — you can act decisively in moments that freeze other people, and you don't get talked out of a hard call by discomfort alone. The trade-off is that low caution and low emotional braking can leave a wake: consequences to yourself and others may register late, if at all. The thing to watch is simple and important — whether other people's costs land before you act, not only after. Deliberately slowing down is where this trait becomes a strength rather than a liability.
Moderate
You can stay composed under pressure and take a risk when it's worth it, without losing your conscience or your read on other people. Fear and guilt reach you, but they inform you rather than run you — you feel the brakes without being paralysed by them, and you can make a bold move and still care how it lands. This is an even, regulated middle: nervy enough to act, wired enough to stop. The cost is mostly invisible — you get neither the pure fearlessness of the bold nor the fine-grained caution of the highly sensitive — but it's a steady place to operate from.
Low
You feel others' emotions readily and tend to think before you leap. Guilt, caution, and warmth are easy for you to reach, so you rarely act in a way you'll regret, and other people's distress registers immediately rather than as an afterthought. The lighter side is empathy and reliability: you're trustworthy in exactly the moments it matters, and people feel safe with you because your conscience is doing its job. The only watch-out is that strong feeling and strong caution can sometimes hold you back from bold action — the risk worth taking, the hard truth worth saying — where a little more nerve would serve you and the people counting on you.