Incontinuities and Illogicalities Ruin Movies & TV

small__3009900665I was watching Big Bang Theory today. In the episode, Leonard was being sent on a trip to Switzerland to observe the Hadron Collider. The entire episode was about Sheldon trying to convince Leonard to take him on the trip instead of Penny, since it had been Sheldon’s lifelong dream to see the Hadron Collider.

While watching, I thought, “Why doesn’t Sheldon just book a trip to Switzerland and see it on his own?” And just like that, the episode was ruined. The entire premise was rubbish, in my mind.

This happens to me ALL THE TIME. [Read more…]

I’m not lazy…HSPs just need more sleep.

sleepOh, sweet, sweet, sleep.

Dr. Elaine Aron recommends that HSPs “spend 8-10 hours in bed each day, sleeping or not.” (source) I totally agree! [Read more…]

Shower time: I Hate Feeling Dirty

I know I run the risk of sounding too damn negative all the time — “I hate this”, “I can’t stand that” — but these are truly the phrases people search for that lead them here. I could write a catchier title, but then how would people find us, and discover they aren’t alone??

One of my biggest pet peeves is sweating or getting dirty when I didn’t expect it. [Read more…]

HSP Podcast Episode 4: Rant Against Working in an Office Cubicle

This episode is a rant. I want you to understand that before you listen.hate cubicle

If you don’t like complaining, you might want to skip it.

In episode #4, I talk about my personal experience working in a cubicle in an office for over 1o years and my battle against the following enemies:

  • A stinky office kitchen
  • Bright lights
  • A painful chair
  • A lack of control
  • Noise

Formidable foes all, but no match for the ultimate solution: quitting and working from home.

Related Posts on This Blog:

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Note: All podcast and blog content is free, as always, I’m just asking for support!

Podcast music attribution: Bust This Bust That (Professor Kliq) / CC BY-NC-SA 3.0

Bad news: we can’t change the world to fit our needs

Learning about introversion and high sensitivity has helped me accept myself so much more.

And since then, I’ve tried to build my life in a way where I can avoid situations that stress me out and upset me.

inner_voice.jpgI attend fewer social events (and I don’t beat myself up about it). Or, when I do attend social events, I find a way to limit how many hours I’m there. I never watch horror movies. My spouse also understands how I feel and is understanding about it. I work for myself from home-which has eliminated a TON of stress from my life…although it hasn’t been good for the bank account. Overall, everything is going pretty well. I am happier than I used to be.

But is this sustainable? Is this reality?

A book recently recommended to me, The Untethered Soul: The Journey Beyond Yourself by Michael Singer, opened my eyes.

It made me realize that I can’t expect to build a world around myself that fits exactly into what I think are my needs.

Why?

Because there’s no way to make the world the way I want. I will only be disappointed. Plus, I’d waste a lot of energy building that bubble that I’d live in.

According to the book, you have to learn to let go and relax. Acknowledge and understand when you start to feel bothered or upset and relax into it.

There are some awesome quotes from this book:

“When a problem is disturbing you, don’t ask, “What should I do about it?” Ask, “What part of me is being disturbed by this?”

“We are constantly trying to hold it all together. If you really want to see why you do things, then don’t do them and see what happens.”

“Eventually you will see that the real cause of problem is not life itself. It’s the commotion the mind makes about life that really causes the problems.”

“There is no reason to constantly attempt to figure everything out.”

“The only permanent solution to your problems is to go inside and let go of the part of you that seems to have so many problems with reality. Once you do that, you’ll be clear enough to deal with what’s left.”

Here I thought I was doing a good thing by trying to build a life with less stressors. But according to this book, that’s wrong. Apparently, by trying to build this bubble of comfort in which to live, I’ll be continuously struggling to hold it all together-which takes a lot of energy. Instead, I should let things happen and learn to accept them. Whoa, right?

Another quote: “How long have you been hiding in there struggling to keep it all together? Any time anything goes wrong in the protective model you built about yourself, you defend and rationalize in order to get it back together. Your mind does not stop struggling until you’ve processed the event or somehow made it go away. People feel their very existence is at stake, and they will fight and argue until they get control back. This is all because we have attempted to build solidity where there is none. Now we have to fight to keep it together. The problem is, there is no way out that way. There is no peace and there is no winning in that struggle. You were told not to build your house upon sand. Well, this is the ultimate sand. In fact, you built your house in empty space. If you continue to cling to what you built, you will have to continually and perpetually defend yourself. You will have to keep everybody and everything straight in order to reconcile your conceptual model with reality. It’s a constant struggle to keep it together.”

These quotes are so powerful. What do you think? There were times when I was listening to this book (I got the audiobook version) and couldn’t believe how it was EXACTLY talking about my life.

photo credit: cellar_door_films via photopin cc

Parties

A stock photo of a house party.

A stock photo of a house party.

I thought I was better at parties.

My husband and I have a number of “couple friends”, i.e., other couples who are our friends. We’ve known them for years, we hang out regularly, and I enjoy spending time with them. Whenever we went to parties, inevitably, some of those same couples were there. Good times. [Read more…]

Should you tell people that you are an HSP?

hsp paths smThink of a time you tried to explain high sensitivity to someone who’d never heard of it before. Maybe it was a friend, family member, or even a co-worker.

And, as you are talking, you can tell from their face that they aren’t buying it.

[Read more…]

How cool would a fitness gym for HSPs and introverts be?!

small__3265269814The Social Anxiety / Shyness / Introvert / HSP Gym has dividers between every treadmill, every stationary bike, and every weight bench-kind of like cubicles. There is an indicator light above each machine area to let you know if it’s occupied.

The gym has an app where you can see how many people are currently at the gym. Fifty people are working out right now? Hmm, I’ll just wait until later. [Read more…]

Why do we equate “sensitive” with “weak”?

sensitive_weak_smWhy do so many of us think that being “sensitive” means you are “weak”?

Sensitive is supposed to mean “quick to detect or respond to slight changes, signals, or influences.”

That doesn’t sound weak at all…it sounds observant! It sounds like someone I want to be friends with!

Equating sensitive with weak is what many of us were taught, what we grew up with-and it’s a shame.

Take this scenario.

A child grows up surrounded by family members who are closed-minded or “old-fashioned”. Maybe it was a parent, a grandparent, an aunt or uncle. All throughout their childhood, this kid hears the parent (or whoever) making pejorative comments about people of a different race, religion, sexual orientation, or who are from a different country.

Kids are sponges. And they believe what their parents and older people say. So this kid grows up with the same closed-minded views as their family.

The kid hits high school or college, and due to being surrounded by more diverse people and more education, they gradually realize that everything they were taught about hating other races or gay people or putting down women or making fun of people with mental illness or physical impediments is bad and wrong.

(This is a convoluted story, but hear me out!)

Many of us grew up thinking sensitive = weak. Sensitive = sissy. People who are sensitive need to suck it up and get a thicker skin. Quit whining.

But just like the kid in my story-who grew up believing stereotypes and hateful behavior toward certain groups of people-that belief is wrong. It was something we learned from the people and culture around us that needs to be unlearned. We need to be open-minded and realize that maybe our beliefs were wrong. Maybe we didn’t have all the information we needed to be as informed as we thought we were.

Being sensitive means you are very aware of other people’s feelings and thoughts, your own feelings and thoughts, your environment, animals, art, music, and everything around you.

Why the hell did this become a bad thing?

Sensitive people are the artists, the musicians, the scientists, the engineers, the botanists, the teachers, the philanthropists, the counselors. Being sensitive is a wonderful quality.

The only downside, sometimes? Being the bearer of the weight of being sensitive.

photo credit: Zaqarbal via photopin cc

I’m reminded that most people don’t understand (or respect) high sensitivity

san diego readerI’m a little bummed out right now.

I submitted my blog to a local publication, the San Diego Reader. In every issue, they publish short excerpts from local blogs. I figured-why not?

They published it today. Here it is.

The headline they chose for the article is:

“In Other Words, Leave me Alone.”

I was not happy about this.

I had been looking forward to this being published, and now I feel like they are almost mocking it a little bit.

The reason I have this blog is to try to help people realize they aren’t alone in being sensitive. I hope to offer camaraderie and a sense of, “I didn’t know other people felt that way!”

It’s a safe place for sensitive people. It makes me happy when you guys read something here and can relate.

This insensitive headline, “Leave Me Alone”, just reminds me that the average person does not understand HSPs, and they aren’t willing to. They still see them as whiny, complain-y, pains-in-you-know-what. They should toughen up and suck it up.

The exact thing we are trying to educate the world against.

I sent them an email trying to explain my view, and asking if they’d reconsider the headline. I hope so.

“Hey look at this, the sensitive person is complaining about their headline! No surprise there…”

 

I’d love your opinion. Do you think I’m overreacting? Do you think the headline is ok?