Highly sensitive person and poly

Interesting. Scarily, that does make sense.

I do find the whole thing fascinating. I think, of course, that there is more to it than money - although I'm sure that sellers of psychiatric drugs are very happy about the growing number of psychiatric illnesses around.

There is also - as LizziE points out - a feeling of comfort and reassurance in being able to give something a name so that it can be researched, talked about and better understood.

For me, the price for that sort of reassurance and ability to talk about something is often too high. To me, the price is fixing people (and myself) in place, having them become the name and that makes change hard.

Even with something like HSP traits. Maybe those are not fixed? Sensitivity to the world can change over time. Maybe the sensitivity is linked to something that can be changed? Maybe it happens as a result of pain - I'm more sensitive when my back is sore? Maybe the person is overwhelmed because of a busy job and demanding home life? Maybe for some people IBS is causing them to become more sensitive and not the other way around?

If I noticed myself being more sensitive to the world than the people around me, I might say to myself: IP - you are very sensitive just now. Is it a good idea to speak to friends and see if they've noticed a difference? Or think about what is going on in your life right now?

Then I might notice if this correlated with pain, with digestive disorders, with stress in my life or with any of the other things that might cause me to be more sensitive - I might do that even if the sensitivity was something I'd had for a lifetime. If being very sensitive was causing me problems, thinking like that might direct me toward a solution.

However, if I said to myself - Oh look, IP, you must be a HSP. That would give me a very different message about myself. It would make the sensitivity more fixed, less open to change. I'd be more likely to leave my life the same and seek counselling or drug therapy to deal with any problems that being very sensitive were causing me.

To me, even though I understand and feel very strongly the desire to label behaviour, the price of doing so is one that is too high to pay, IMO.

I find it just easier that if somebody is behaving badly toward me to avoid them or change the way I interact with them so that the bad behaviour doesn't impact on me and go on with my life. I don't need them to be ill to justify me doing those things - the fact that they are being horrible to me is justification enough.

IP
 
For me, the price for that sort of reassurance and ability to talk about something is often too high. To me, the price is fixing people (and myself) in place, having them become the name and that makes change hard.

Even with something like HSP traits. Maybe those are not fixed? Sensitivity to the world can change over time. Maybe the sensitivity is linked to something that can be changed? Maybe it happens as a result of pain - I'm more sensitive when my back is sore? Maybe the person is overwhelmed because of a busy job and demanding home life? Maybe for some people IBS is causing them to become more sensitive and not the other way around?

I find it interesting that there is some association here with saying someone has a mental illness (or, we could even say, a physical illness) means that they are "fixed" in place or that that means there is...something about them that can't change, if they wanted to change it.

To speak from a physical sense, my uncle was diagnosed as per-diabetic. He changed his life, exercising much more, changed eating habits, really cut down on his drinking - he's not longer per-diabetic.

I've been diagnosed as depressed several times in my life - and I was! Very depressed, hospitalized twice because of it, in fact (for me, severe depression can be accompanied by psychosis. I'll have paranoid delusions and sometimes even hear things).

Depressed. Psychosis.

Those are labels.

I took medication for some months and/or years. I exercised more. I did cognitive behavioral therapy. I discovered more good things to insert into my life that give me happiness.

And now those labels don't fit anymore. Though they could fit again, someday.

A friend of mine was diagnosed with celiac disease a few months ago. She said that - even before she totally eliminated gluten, some of her symptoms went way down. She believes that is because having a diagnosis was incredibly comforting to her. Just knowing what she had to avoid eating made eating far less stressful. Before her diagnosis, eating was like a battle-ground for her - she never knew what would set her off.

I think, InfinitePossibility, that if some people get boxed in by diagnosis...that's really sad. I've never considered having one to be...I'm trying to figure out how to explain this. Because having a diagnosis can be limiting, absolutely. Depending on what we're talking about though (physical or mental, things that can improve or things that are permanent), having a diagnosis might be finally giving the name to a limit that a person has had all along, but didn't know exactly what it was (like my friend with celiac disease). Or it might give them a framework with which to work on themself.

Knowing that my mom probably has Borderline Personality Disorder hasn't caused me to put her in a box. She put herself in a box in regards to me years ago, with her destructive and abusive behaviors towards me. By having a better idea of what is wrong with her, and how she related to me and the world, I've been able to find ways to let her out of that box a bit, if that makes sense. I know ways that I can now safely communicate with her, so I can relax my hold on having her in that box. Does that make sense?


However, if I said to myself - Oh look, IP, you must be a HSP. That would give me a very different message about myself. It would make the sensitivity more fixed, less open to change. I'd be more likely to leave my life the same and seek counselling or drug therapy to deal with any problems that being very sensitive were causing me.

This is very interesting to me, especially the part I bolded. Why wouldn't you still talk to friends, make changes in your life, think about is going on with you? If I'm reading what you wrote correctly (and please correct me if I'm wrong), you're saying that because you told yourself you had a problem, you would do less and/or give up on changing in certain ways, because telling yourself you have that problem would cut you off from trying to fix it in certain ways. I'm curious - why would you do that?

FTR, my experience with psych doctors has been very mixed. The first time I was depressed, I had a doctor who treated my depression as a life-long problem that I would always need medication for and that was that. He very much wanted me to be in that box, and stay in that box (and probably make him money). I would say he was a very bad doctor, and it manifested in other ways too, like him ignoring me when I said my medication levels were too high. I told him that I could barely function because I was so exhausted from my meds. He would say "your blood tests show the medication is in the right concentration, you just need time to adjust". He said that for over a year.

Eventually, I abandoned him, and stopped taking those meds.

The psych doctor who I have now is fabulous. She coordinates with my therapist. She's open to (and has recommendations for) alternate therapies: art therapy, acupuncture, hypnotherapists, cognitive behavioral therapists, animal therapy...she probably knows about every therapy out there that has helped people. With her, I've taken anti-depressants and anti-anxiety meds multiple times - and been tapered off them as my symptoms have improved. I've also tried cognitive behavioral therapy, and hynotherapy.

She definitely doesn't believe in boxing people in, and challenges her patients to look at everything in their lives and FIX them, not just slap medication on them.

I think this is why I really don't understand all the discussion about diagnoses being seen as boxes or limiting. To me, they're tools. If I was a painter, and I picked up a certain kind of brush, I wouldn't tell myself that now that I started using that brush, I couldn't use any of the other brushes out there, not to mention the palette knives, sponges, and other tools.

Does that make sense?
 
There is also - as LizziE points out - a feeling of comfort and reassurance in being able to give something a name so that it can be researched, talked about and better understood.

However, if I said to myself - Oh look, IP, you must be a HSP. That would give me a very different message about myself. It would make the sensitivity more fixed, less open to change. I'd be more likely to leave my life the same and seek counselling or drug therapy to deal with any problems that being very sensitive were causing me.

IP

Naming a beast can definitely take away some of it's scariness. I have so many of the traits of an HSP, and always have, that using the term is just a simple, elegant way to explain certain hardwiring. It isn't meant to be a complete summary of who I am any more than any other label I might use to describe myself (woman, bisexual, introvert, etc.) It has definitely been a comfort for me to know that others feel this way. I felt like a huge freak growing up, and seriously felt like other people had some kind of natural armor I lacked. But the older I get and the more I accept my sensitivity, the better my life becomes. For example, I finally accepted that I wasn't thriving in my fast-paced NYC career, ditched it and moved to an island to become an eco-tour guide. I know that I tense up around boisterous dogs and kids, and just acknowledging that makes spending time with them less annoying. I admit to myself that I could never, ever sit in a stadium full of cheering fans, and have no desire to try. I stopped putting pressure on myself to constantly and vigorously socialize, and allow myself a lot of quiet alone time.

It's just information. How you use it is up to you.
 
I find it just easier that if somebody is behaving badly toward me to avoid them or change the way I interact with them so that the bad behaviour doesn't impact on me and go on with my life. I don't need them to be ill to justify me doing those things - the fact that they are being horrible to me is justification enough.

IP

I loved your whole statement, and also agree with Lizzie.

When I was first diagnosed with ME in 2012, I actually got a lot worse before I got better, in part because for the first year of the label, I gave up changing as I was told I would always be this label and there was nothing that could be done to fix it or make it better. So I gave up. My muscles and body weakened more because I stayed in bed even on days I could have got up and moved around even a little bit. Because I believe my doctors label about me more than myself. But ME is a strange one because it's both psychological and physiological.

Now I try to think of myself as a whole human with this illness, but it's a part of me, not all of me, just like mother, daughter, artist, American, British...bi...poly...these are all parts of me not all of me.

Now I visualise myself and other people as having huge storages filled with bits and pieces of "who they are" similar to filing cabinets, but they aren't physically IN one of those files, or cabinets or boxes.

This has helped me hugely in how I relate to people, not just people with whatever illness/sensitivity etc, but myself too.

I Care more if that person is self aware, and working on towards relating with their behaviour in a kind and honest way towards me. Regardless of illness.
 
I think this has been a very thoughtful discussion involving multiple perspectives and I take exception to the suggestion that any members with a particular viewpoint should start their own thread. This has been an illuminating and respectful conversation, and as long as no one violates our Guidelines, there is no reason to make anyone feel unwelcome to participate and offer whatever opinions they have on the topic.
 
I think this has been a very thoughtful discussion involving multiple perspectives and I take exception to the suggestion that any members with a particular viewpoint should start their own thread. This has been an illuminating and respectful conversation, and as long as no one violates our Guidelines, there is no reason to make anyone feel unwelcome to participate and offer whatever opinions they have on the topic.

As I suggested that, I'd like to offer some of the clarification on what I meant by that.

If we start a post about highly sensitive people and poly, meaning that someone wants to talk about what it means to be highly sensitive and poly, but a large number of responses refute even the existence of being highly sensitive or go into discussing a dislike of using labels for things such as being highly sensitive (or other labels), then the original point of the thread (discussing being highly sensitive, poly, and working through that) gets lost, no?

That doesn't mean that disputing being highly sensitive is a bad thing to do. It doesn't mean that having a discussion about labels and why some people are comfortable with them and other people aren't isn't a great discussion to have. But neither of those discussions actually further the topic, which is "what does it mean, to be highly sensitive and poly?"

Which is why I suggested starting a separate thread.

One of the Guidelines to the site is that threads should stay on topic. If many of the responses are debating either the validity of calling oneself highly sensitive or are treading into debating if labels such as "highly sensitive" are valid, then the thread has been hi-jacked, has it not? That makes it no longer about discussing being highly sensitive and poly. It turns it into a thread about the validity of labels, or the validity of being "highly sensitive".

Does it make more sense now why I'd suggest separate threads for those issues?

I don't identify 100% as highly sensitive myself, but speaking from a vulnerable place, I feel far less likely to share the parts of me that do feel highly sensitive and may be prone to overreaction (because a symptom of being highly sensitive may be taking things too seriously. like feeling the touch of a feather as intensely as the touch of a thousand feathers), when people are debating the validity of using the words "highly sensitive as a description".

To try to plow on being vulnerable and sensitive, Jon and I had a really great talk tonight about how he's a pretty tough guy, and how a lot of the abusive/coercion that Lora tried to foist upon him truly did roll off his back. However, it didn't roll off of my back. It deeply hurt me to hear her try to manipulate him and call into question his manhood or his "normalcy" in order to badger him into doing what she wanted to. He both apologized and thanked me for willing to be vulnerable about how being around those behaviors was deeply painful for me - probably far more painful that it was for him.

Hand in hand with that talk was one about how someone hurting us, coming at us, was far less likely to truly hurt us than someone coming at someone who we love. Had Lora tried to come at me, question my womanhood, or my normalcy in order to badger me into doing what she wanted, I'd have told her to go fuck herself gently with a chainsaw. And I wouldn't have given a shit about anything that came out of her mouth after that, because once she used that kind of approach to try to bend me to her will, I wouldn't have trusted another word that came out of her mouth.

But watching her do that to someone I love, someone external to me, someone who I'm not sure how strong they are in the face of such things, and how much it may be hurting them...that is infinitely more painful.

It means the world to me to know that Jon seeing my suffering helped him understand that her behavior was coercive and abusive, even if parts of it didn't truly damage him (parts of it did. he talked about that enough to admit to it, but isn't yet willing to get into it farther than that). But at the same time, feeling so deeply and keenly when he's hurt, it's a painful thing. I don't know if I get the flipside of that, that my compersion with him is that much more intense also. I guess it's a thing to find out. I have noticed that even my small joys tend to be quite intense. So maybe that is a good part, a compensation for feeling some things very deeply?

Or maybe I'm not highly sensitive, but the situation got so fucked up that I couldn't do anything other than feel it deeply, because it was deeply fucked up. Who can say?

The important thing is - her stuff is out. He's getting the keys tomorrow. We had a wonderful talk about some of our deepest fears and feelings and feel stronger for it.

Life is good.
 
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Part of discussing HSP is debating whether it exists or how we should acknowledge it's existence. The topic is not lost at all. It just isn't being discussed in a way that suits you, Lizzie.
 
About HSP

The reasons why I see this label as potentially problematic is because it can be used by the person, or possibly worse, by other people, to halt adult communication with the "HSP".

For example, Benjamin refuses to discuss why his wife's other partner's must bow in his presence because he is too 'sensitive' to handle the conversation.

Or Mary doesn't think it's worth putting Steve through a frank conversation about her need for non-monogamy as he is a HSP and she doesn't want to upset him, so she goes behind his back and does it anyway.

Or, Rosie is a HSP and she loves Dan; this means Rosie has to have an inordinate amount of input into Dan's other relationships because being a HSP means that Rosie's moods will be unusually influenced by them. This is why Rosie is unable to respect that her metamours are not answerable to her and she ends up chasing them away.

So, basically, if there is such a "thing" as HSP, I can only envisage it as being a burden in a polyamorous relationship. I've had partners and metamours who refused to discuss their actions, feelings or needs with the people they affect because it was "too hard", but in the meantime they were content to obstruct everyone else from being happy.
 
The reasons why I see this label as potentially problematic is because it can be used by the person, or possibly worse, by other people, to halt adult communication with the "HSP".

For example, Benjamin refuses to discuss why his wife's other partner's must bow in his presence because he is too 'sensitive' to handle the conversation.

Or Mary doesn't think it's worth putting Steve through a frank conversation about her need for non-monogamy as he is a HSP and she doesn't want to upset him, so she goes behind his back and does it anyway.

Or, Rosie is a HSP and she loves Dan; this means Rosie has to have an inordinate amount of input into Dan's other relationships because being a HSP means that Rosie's moods will be unusually influenced by them. This is why Rosie is unable to respect that her metamours are not answerable to her and she ends up chasing them away.

So, basically, if there is such a "thing" as HSP, I can only envisage it as being a burden in a polyamorous relationship. I've had partners and metamours who refused to discuss their actions, feelings or needs with the people they affect because it was "too hard", but in the meantime they were content to obstruct everyone else from being happy.

This.

And also the other side of it. If you're given the label HSP and never thought of yourself as sensitive, then other people can walk around treating you in childlike and infantile manners when they find out, instead of treating you like a fully autonomous person who can handle stuff.

I can't tell you how long it's taken me to convince people I can be a reliable and trustworthy friend because of my ME which presents as " if she takes on too much she can't handle it" which is a similar aspect of HSP.

Back on topic as was suggested and I haven't actually answered, how does this affect my poly relationships?

I suppose it means there's certain things I accept I can only do in limited manners. It doesn't affect my communication unless I highly sensitive to one person. But then that person is usually just treating me badly, and I being the giver, usually rationalise this behaviour , so it's a matter of dealing with the internal rationalisation and not succumbing to it that makes me feel ill and need space.

I know that some men, use the term "man cave" when they need to go away and process something. I use this term too, but woman cave, to explain my need for excessive downtime. I also explain that I need a lot of quiet time, and can't always do outside activities.

It does sometimes affect my sex, as achieving orgasm can be too much energy/ too much sensation. Same with light or sound, or any other thing, but again I just tell people up front what I am feeling on the day.

I tend to quantify my energy and "deal with" factor in the day as spoons analogy. This could probably be used for HSP, and how sensitive on the day any person is, or if it changes...

The spoon analogy goes like this,
I held up ten spoons to my kids, explaining to them 1) meant a perso. Who was paraplegic, or in coma and no power to move or expend energy. 10) was a super Olympic athlete winner, who had trained and conditioned their body with a higher output than normal.
I fall in the range of 5-2 most days. If I am lucky I will have a 6 day, and feel pretty freaking normal...as the day wears on I can tell my girls, I only have two spoons left, and they'll understand this as, I need to rest, slow down, or do something less energy/active intensive.
 
I'd never heard of HSP or Cluster Bs until this thread. But I can recognise HSP descriptors that I experience, like severe reaction to loud noises (this was significant for a couple of years in my mid 30s), and I experience empathy to the point that I struggle to support Hubby when he's down because I end up down with him, it rather sux in that situation and it's what I'm working on right now. But it also means I literally have telepathy with a couple of people (Hubby and M most often). But Cluster Bs don't seem to enter my life, so in my experience predator and prey, not so much.

So just observing myself, I notice that different reactions will come to the fore at different times of my life, probably related to other shit that's going on at the time.

These are experiences. Not what I am.
I am not an HSP. I experience HSP traits.
I am not sad. I experience sadness.
I'm experiencing happiness.
I'm experiencing warmth.
I'm experiencing restricted financial means.
I'm experiencing marriage.
I'm experiencing femaleness.

All are transitory. If I don't 'buy in' to being one thing or another by saying "I AM" then it is a lot easier for me to move through those experiences. Because as far as I perceive, life changes, sometimes quicker, sometimes slower, and if I'm not enjoying an experience, if I let it pass, it will pass quicker than if I fight it and try and make it pass.

umm, I've lost track, is this a hijack of the thread? ;-)
 
It seems to all boil down to how we use these labels.

If I lean on a label as an excuse for problematic behavior (and as an excuse to not apologize, work to mitigate that behavior, etc.), then it's a problem.

If I use a label to understand how I react and change my actions or environment accordingly, so it doesn't become a problem (OR to recognize when things become a problem), then that's simply part of understanding yourself and how things work best for you.

Many people do the former. Hopefully, many also do the latter (although I would guess they're far less noticeable than the first group).
 
One of the Guidelines to the site is that threads should stay on topic. If many of the responses are debating either the validity of calling oneself highly sensitive or are treading into debating if labels such as "highly sensitive" are valid, then the thread has been hi-jacked, has it not? That makes it no longer about discussing being highly sensitive and poly. It turns it into a thread about the validity of labels, or the validity of being "highly sensitive".

Does it make more sense now why I'd suggest separate threads for those issues?
Oh, did you think I didn't understand your reasoning? No, I understood. However, I disagree. The thread was not hijacked. Related tangents and meandering on a topic are allowed. It's just when things go too far afield, with unrelated tangents, joking, arguing, attacking, etc., that it becomes problematic and a thread gets shut down or new threads should be started. If someone comes here and states, "I just read about HSP on Wikipedia. I think it describes me. I am different/special because I feel things so deeply. How can I do poly and be HSP?" then challenging the concept of HSP, and its label, are still within the bounds of such a topic. More viewpoints bring more understanding, I think.

However, now this tangent is becoming a meta-discussion (discussion about the discussion) and that is heading off-topic. The other Mods and I watch for anything that causes problems in threads, but for now we will leave this one to follow its course. We don't need to debate whether it is staying on topic anymore. Moderators can move off-topic posts to other threads if that becomes necessary. If anyone has a problem with a post, report it.

Getting back on topic...
I don't identify 100% as highly sensitive myself . . .
IMO, it's the identifying that can lead to most problems for people with regard to any label.
 
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The reasons why I see this label as potentially problematic is because it can be used by the person, or possibly worse, by other people, to halt adult communication with the "HSP".

I don't understand this leap of logic. If someone decided to use the label HSP as an excuse not to deal with stuff, that is just faulty reasoning on their part. Inability to discuss things like an adult is not a trait of a HSP.

So, basically, if there is such a "thing" as HSP, I can only envisage it as being a burden in a polyamorous relationship. I've had partners and metamours who refused to discuss their actions, feelings or needs with the people they affect because it was "too hard", but in the meantime they were content to obstruct everyone else from being happy.

I have no idea where you're getting this. That certainly isn't me at all, nor is it a common trait of HSP to avoid deep conversations, quite the contrary. I identify with strongly HSP traits, and believe me, backing down from discussing feelings is NOT a problem I have. I tend to discuss my feelings a lot. We are also hugely empathic, so obstructing the happiness of others isn't something we do well.

As per the original topic, the challenges one might face as an HSP in a poly relationship (or any relationship) tend to have to do with feeling slights and rejections deeply, needing a great deal of alone and quiet time, and being overly empathic--taking on problems and emotions that aren't necessarily our own. And those of us who have these challenges will have them whether or not we or anyone else label ourselves HSP.
 
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As per the original topic, the challenges one might face as an HSP in a poly relationship (or any relationship) tend to have to do with feeling slights and rejections deeply,
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Can you not see how this would make a polyamorous relationship difficult? Or as you say, any relationship.
 
Oh, did you think I didn't understand your reasoning? No, I understood. However, I disagree. The thread was not hijacked. Related tangents and meandering on a topic are allowed. It's just when things go too far afield, with unrelated tangents, joking, arguing, attacking, etc., that it becomes problematic and a thread gets shut down or new threads should be started. If someone comes here and states, "I just read about HSP on Wikipedia. I think it describes me. I am different because I feel deeply. How can I do poly and be HSP?" then challenging the concept of HSP, and its label, are still within the bounds of such a topic. More viewpoints bring more understanding, I think.

I guess we'll have to agree to disagree, then. In the two other forums that I participate online most heavily, challenging the concept of the thing is considered thread hi-jacking, for the reasons I mentioned - it can become hard for people who want to talk about the original topic to actually talk about it, because the thread has begun to debate the validity of the subject itself. That is a thing that the mods will say "This is a thread about X. If you want to debate the validity of X itself, start a new thread. This is for discussion that has already established that X is a thing."

I'll adjust my expectations in that regard with this forum, because I think there is enough here to make it worth posting on, even if I don't agree entirely with the style of moderation.


IMO, it's the identifying that can lead to most problems for people with regard to any label.

I still don't understand that. To you, what does "identifying" do to a person? To me, all it does is...identify. Identification doesn't become an excuse for bad behavior.

When I was diagnosed with severe depression with psychotic elements, I did some really crazy shit and scared some people. When I wasn't psychotic, I apologized to them, and told them that if they wanted nothing to do with me, I wouldn't take offense to that at all (some stayed my friends, some didn't). Having identified my symptoms doesn't give me carte blache to use them to get away with bad behavior. I won't accept that kind of reasoning from anybody else, either.
 
If someone comes here and states, "I just read about HSP on Wikipedia. I think it describes me. I am different because I feel deeply. How can I do poly and be HSP?"

Personally, I've done more than read a Wikipedia article on the topic and decided "that's me." I've read two books by Dr. Elaine Aron on the topic, my favorite being The Highly Sensitive Person in Love, and talked to my psychiatrist about them back when I was seeing one. I seriously doubt the people debating the existence of HSPs have done ANY reading or research or all on the topic. Please, correct me if I'm wrong.

I think the OP asked a very intelligent question about the challenges faced by having this sort of temperament, and personally, I wish there were more responses on that topic rather than debating it's existence at all. But, hey, it's not just my forum, and at least responses have been interesting and respectful. This really is an awesome forum. for making you think and rethink.
 
Personally, I've done more than read a Wikipedia article on the topic and decided "that's me." I've read two books by Dr. Elaine Aron on the topic, my favorite being The Highly Sensitive Person in Love, and talked to my psychiatrist about them back when I was seeing one. I seriously doubt the people debating the existence of HSPs have done ANY reading or research or all on the topic. Please, correct me if I'm wrong.

I think the OP asked a very intelligent question about the challenges faced by having this sort of temperament, and personally, I wish there were more responses on that topic rather than debating it's existence at all. But, hey, it's not just my forum, and at least responses have been interesting and respectful. This really is an awesome forum. for making you think and rethink.

You know what I think is a key issue here? If I did read about HSP and think I identified with it, I'd see it as a bad thing that I wanted to change. I wouldn't see it as healthy or conducive to the things I want in life. It wouldn't be something that I saw as something to work around or accept.
 
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Can you not see how this would make a polyamorous relationship difficult? Or as you say, any relationship.

The way you phrased that: "makes a polyamorous relationship difficult" sounds rather condemning. Yes, it can be a challenge. But we all bring certain challenges to our relationships. For example, I tend to be sensitive to perceived slights and rejection. That's my challenge. But I'm also a really good communicator and I don't have issues with jealously. Another person might struggle with jealousy or with being a bad communicator.

I don't think HSP's have any more or less challenges than everyone else, I think we just probably a few very specific challenges...
 
You know what I think is a key issue here? If I did read about HSP and think I identified with it, I'd see it as a bad thing that I wanted to change. I wouldn't see it as healthy or conducive to the things I want in life. It wouldn't be something that I saw as something to work around or accept.

This is a thread about the challenges of being HSP and in a poly relationship, so I guess I can see where you got that if this the only reading you've done on the topic. But no. There are also great, beautiful, wonderful things about being HSP which make us awesome in relationships.

Some of the GOOD traits of an HSP that I personally possess: great attention to detail. Deep empathy and passion. Finely-tuned senses. Connection to and recognition of my own emotions. Ability to express myself very well.

HSP is NOT inherently a negative thing. It's not a disorder or a syndrome.
 
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