Sorry I’m Late… I Didn’t Want to Come (6 Socializing Tips for HSPs)
As highly sensitive people, we crave meaningful relationships, but they also drain us. Here are six secrets to navigating your social life as an HSP.
As highly sensitive people, we crave meaningful relationships, but they also drain us. Here are six secrets to navigating your social life as an HSP.
As a highly sensitive person, I used to get anxious about bad things happening in the world. Then I discovered I could train hope. Here’s how you can, too.
Some of the same traits that make a person creative are also traits of the highly sensitive person. So does this mean HSPs are natural born creatives?
When the movie soundtrack soars, I feel it. When I pass a person begging for money, yep, I feel it.
Being a highly sensitive person means you grow up knowing you’re different — and you keep a lot inside.
Do you skip self-care and downtime because everyone else’s needs seem more important?
Being an HSP involves processing everything very deeply — and that can be a double-edged sword
Suddenly, I understood that every time I added things to my home, I was adding to my sensory load.
They get overstimulated easily and need downtime. But try explaining that to a six-year-old.
Our personality is not a nuisance.
People think you’re a walking contradiction.
For highly sensitive people, who are far more influenced by their environment, living with someone creates a whole set of extra issues. Here’s why.
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