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Maybe these qualities -- and challenges -- sound familiar.
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Do you have a rich, complex inner life?
Are you deeply moved by the arts or music? Do you get annoyed when people try to get you to do too many things at once? Do you try hard to avoid making mistakes? Do you avoid violent
or scary movies? Are you affected by other people's moods? Are you very aware of subtleties in your
environment? Are you very sensitive to pain? Are you easily
overwhelmed by bright lights,
strong smells, or loud noises?
Do you have a strong need for time alone every day? Are you
shaken up by change? When you were growing up, did your parents
and other adults tell you, "Don't be so sensitive"?
If you answer yes to many of these
questions, you may be spending a fair amount of time worrying that
they're something wrong with you. In a high-speed culture
where being an outgoing achiever is highly valued, people who are easily aroused by sensory
and emotional stimulation often feel weird or defective. Some of the most interesting and gifted people who come to see me say that they feel this way. "Everybody
else was having a good time," they say after a social event or a meeting, sounding puzzled and discouraged. "I was the only one who felt the way I did."
In her book The Highly Sensitive Person (from which the questions in the first
paragraph above are drawn) the Jungian-trained psychologist Elaine Aron estimates that 15
to 20 percent of the population falls into this category. Aron, who is based in San Francisco
and whose research on heightened sensitivity has also appeared in scholarly publications, offers helpful suggestions
on how to stop seeing yourself as strange and use your trait to create a fuller, richer life. Everyone feels and functions best when neither too bored nor too aroused, says Aron. The tricky
thing for the highly sensitive person is that she or he is more easily aroused than others and may find it difficult to follow
the body's cues. By learning to recognize the gifts that your
heightened sensitivity brings and to pinpoint your optimal level of arousal and live within it, you can find more fulfillment in relationships and work -- and contribute your natural wisdom to the world around you.
Therapy can offer an opportunity to move beyond feeling weird and to begin to hone your valuable intuition and insight. But it's important to work with a practitioner
who appreciates the challenges and gifts of highly sensitive
people, rather than viewing their traits as "problems" and
assuming that these are the
product of childhood trauma or a dysfunctional family. It's also important to work with a therapist who is aware of and responsive
to any tendency you may have to be overwhelmed by the therapy
process itself, so that the two of you can work together to create a sacred space for your healing. Aron wisely points out
that although highly sensitive people are often drawn to spirituality, they may often grow
more by immersing themselves in the world, and therapy can provide invaluable support. Maybe you're ready to begin to value
your heightened sensitivity. With a therapist who maintains appropriate boundaries while being sensitive to the part of you that is as tender as a baby, you can learn to balance the demands
and richness of your inner life with the challenges and opportunities of living with others.
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Last updated on
N.Y. Licensed Psychoanalyst
Certified, National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis
Member, American Association of Pastoral Counselors Individuals, Couples, Parent
coaching Westchester County and New York City
914-941-6478
212-802-7333
Serving the online community as well as midtown Manhattan, 10016, 10022, 10017, Westchester Putnam Dutchess
and Fairfield counties, including Ossining Briarcliff Manor Croton-on-Hudson Yorktown Heights Sleepy Hollow Tarrytown Pleasantville
Pocantico Hills Chappaqua Millwood Mount Kisco Somers Katonah Mahopac Irvington Hastings-on-Hudson Yonkers and Valhalla.
Individual therapy, spiritual counseling, couples counseling, and parent coaching, as well as premarital
counseling and help with divorce, relationships and communication.
Copyright © 2005 Jean Fitzpatrick. All rights reserved.
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