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Wishing Like Children

What did you wish for over the holidays? Did you come up with any resolutions for the New Year? What filters did you put your wants through before they were spoken out loud or written down? Using a reality filter makes sense. We want to want things we have a hope of getting. Stretch the wanting too far into pure fantasy, and the unfulfilled dream will snap back and smack us. Get real or get disappointed, right?

Check out these wishes from very young children who called in to a radio show two days before Christmas to tell Santa what they wanted:

  • an airport
  • a cow
  • a reindeer
  • a moon ferry

They brought yearnings up from the depths of their souls, spilling them out into the ears of thousands in their chirpy, excited, undoubting voices.

We forget that wishing from the soul involves lifting our feet off the ground to gain the perspective of joy. Forget the weight of reality. Rise up and look around. The far horizons aren’t even within sight.

“Without leaps of imagination, or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all, is a form of planning.”

~ Gloria Steinem

Flickr photo credit: One Wish, by Jenny Romney.

Bliss Reminders

“No problem can be solved
from the level of consciousness
that created it.”

~ Albert Einstein

I take much of life to heart, feeling and sensing my way through the days, aiming for the miraculous place just before feeling fully spills over into feeling too much.

Cue the circus music.

What do I do when this balancing act, for whatever reason, can’t be sustained and I spill into the net, landing with my arms folded across my chest and a scowl on my face, peeved, frustrated, or sad.

The best and most immediate restorer of balance I know is a jolt of joy, delivered in the form of a list of things that make me happy. I go to my room, close the door, pull out my bliss reminders list and start reading. The list is pages and pages long – long enough to suck me into its vortex. No matter what the circumstance, reading the list never fails to shift my mood toward the positive. I feel my body lighten, and my mood along with it. The bliss list has the power of a catapult, and I’m airborne again in no time.

The blue dress and matching coat I had as a kid. Maps. Musée Fesch in Ajaccio. Campfires. Practicing whistling in the tent during the sleet storm. Monkey puzzle trees. Pamela’s gluten-free brownies mix. Illustrated journals.

Try it for yourself. Use a format you’re drawn to. Write the list into a blank book, for example, or keep the list on a computer and print it out. As you list joys, make them as personal as possible. Mine your past. Catalogue the joys of all your senses. Get specific. Keep adding to the list. Come back to it often for a lift.

Empowering Sensitivity

Highly Sensitive Power began six months ago as a website for highly sensitive people. That it attracts readers who are not highly sensitive by the standards of Elaine Aron’s self-test has been a surprise.

The test for high sensitivity is not as definite as a test for pregnancy. The range of sensitivity extends in both directions in infinite gradations and we decide for ourselves where we land on it. Many people who don’t consider themselves highly sensitive do consider themselves to be sensitive, even if only in one particular way.

The growing movement toward empowerment for highly sensitive people is, at its core, a quest for the acceptance of sensitivity in our culture. Sensitivity means responsiveness, responsibility, connectedness, tuning in, awareness, thoughtfulness. Any broadening of the movement to include anyone who wants more respect for their sensitive traits can only help everyone who is sensitive, whether highly so or not.

Sensitive people who want what Highly Sensitive Power offers are welcome here. In fact, many of the articles I write already refer to sensitivity rather than high sensitivity specifically. To further help all sensitive people know they are welcome here, I will start this new year off by tweaking the site just a little. Because I believe that highly sensitive people can lead the way for our culture, the site will still be called Highly Sensitive Power and remains highly sensitive at its core, as it must, since I am highly sensitive myself.

The most noticeable adjustment will be a rewording of the tag line from “empowering highly sensitive people through curiosity, creativity, and community” to one that immediately welcomes all sensitive people. I don’t want to change the tag line substantially, and I’d like your opinion about what to change it to. The two most attractive options for me so far are:

Empowering sensitivity through curiosity, creativity, and community

or

Sensitivity. Curiosity. Creativity. Community.

Please leave a comment if you’d like. I’d love to know what you think.

Coloured pencil drawing by Grace Kerina.

The High Demand for Sensitivity

What if sensitivity was in high demand? Not only high sensitivity, but sensitivity in general. What if the rareness of your particular sensitive traits prompted competition for your time, attention, and insights?

Recruiters have to be turned away by your assistants. You’ve set the cost of tapping into your skills high, and yet there’s a long list of people and businesses waiting for you to have time for them. Facilitators help you manage the details of your life so you can focus on what you enjoy the most, what you’re best at. There’s enough time for mulling and pondering in peace, enough free time, enough stimulation, enough access to information of all kinds. You set the tone. You know what you need in order to allow your sensitive qualities to shine, to help others, to shift perspectives, to mend and heal. You are, without a doubt, strong and in control.

This is not a fantasy. Look around. There are examples everywhere of people allowing their unique sensitivities to take them far. A scientist tunes in to the world of bees and shows us why they are struggling and how we can help them (and receives offers of collaboration and funding). An author follows a trail through the confusion and reports back in language that makes the tops of our heads lift off (and rises to the top of the bestseller lists). And many others, all over the world, in infinite variety.

You may not be famous or turning away offers (yet), but you can certainly trust that your sensitivities are worth loving and fostering. Find a way to share them.

Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title

My goal with this Christmas Day article is simply to make you laugh. I thought I’d tell a few jokes (What’s brown and sticky? … A stick.) and provide a few links to humorous articles.

Maybe later.

I’m too busy wiping tears of laughter from my eyes after researching Bookseller Magazine‘s Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title.

Started in 1978 as a way to combat boredom at the Frankfurt Book Fair (the book fair of all book fairs, its beginnings rooted in the 12th century), the Diagram Prize honours books hovering on the edges of the publishing industry. Titles suggested by publishers, booksellers, librarians, and Bookseller readers are culled to a shortlist, which is voted on by the public via online poll.

2008 marked the 30th anniversary of the Diagram Prize, prompting Bookseller Magazine to determine the oddest book title of the past 30 years. The winner, Greek Rural Postmen and Their Cancellation Numbers, by Derek Willan, beat out Gary Leon Hill’s second-place winner People Who Don’t Know They’re Dead.

See Wikipedia’s entry about the Diagram Prize for a list of past winners. And now there’s a book to mark the prize’s 30th anniversary: How to Avoid Huge Ships And Other Implausibly Titled Books, by Joel Rickett.

Merry Christmas – and I mean that literally.

Vancouver Public Library atrium photo by Michael Mundhenk.

British TV Crime Dramas

However we spend this holiday season – surrounded by family members who drive us bonkers or fill us with joy, alone and bored or satisfied, or in the quiet nest of close family, there comes a time when a break would be nice. May I recommend a British television crime drama in such a case?

The recommendations here are chosen with great care for the nature of the sensitive soul. They are the shows I enjoy the most, picked because they favour intellect over violence and offer interesting characters. Take the list to the DVD store and you may find that, back at Family Holiday Central, you’ll gather a late-night crowd of fellow viewers who share a need for quality down time.

Happy viewing, and I wish you and your loved ones a peaceful and intriguing holiday season.

State of Play – I gush. I can’t help it. State of Play remains at the top of the British TV crime drama heap for me. Set in London, the action follows the investigations of a team of tenacious newspaper reporters as they explore possible connections between two events. The quick deaths at the beginning (tame by American crime show standards) are worth weathering to watch the long remainder of the story that unfolds around them. With brilliant acting by the entire cast, including James McAvoy and Bill Nighy, this six-part, 350-minute thriller grips from the very beginning.

A Touch of Frost – Detective Inspector Jack Frost warms my heart because he remains an unruly kid at heart, even though he’s well into middle age. His run-ins with his stuffy boss, his teetering piles of papers and coat-pocket filing system endear him. And he’s aces as a detective, to the surprise of many. The series started in 1997 and is still running. The first seasons show their age, but if it interests you at all, stay with it for better production values as the series progresses.

McCallum -The glorious John Hannah plays the title role of Dr. Iain McCallum in this two-season series from 1995. Though McCallum is a forensic pathologist, the focus is on the characters’ personalities and the insights used to solve crimes rather than the gore of the crimes themselves. Like Jack Frost, McCallum is a misfit, a man with a big heart and a rebellious streak who struggles to be the person he wants to be. There are nine episodes in this series, but I strongly recommend skipping number nine altogether – the real story ends with episode eight and McCallum doesn’t even make an appearance in the markedly lower-quality final episode.

Amnesia – Scottish Actor John Hannah also stars in this TV 145-minute mini-series. Hannah plays Detective Mackenzie Stone, a man who finds himself questioning his own mental health at the same time he investigates a man who has amnesia – or does he? Amnesia delivers well-managed twists and turns, including a main character with enough problems of his own to compellingly complexify the story’s layers.

Stay tuned for British TV Crime Dramas – Part Two, coming up within the next month.

Janurary 3, 2010: And now there’s also a British TV Crime Dramas – Part Three.

The Reset Button

I have a little fantasy about a reset button, probably prompted by my love of science fiction. When I’ve maneuvered myself into a state of overwhelming complexity or pushed myself harder than is healthy, I imagine that I actually have a reset button. It’s located in the part of my back that I can’t reach on my own, which means I need to ask someone else to push it to reset me, providing me with a double-check. “Are you sure?” they would ask, finger poised. “Yes. Please. And make it quick,” I’d say. They’d push the button and calm would descend. Worries would fade out. And tiredness would be replaced by pep.

Alas.

The next best thing to an actual reset button is a collection of reset activities that do the same thing. I reset by going for a longish walk by myself, reading a novel in the bathtub, watching a DVD that makes me laugh, burrowing under a pile of warm covers and letting my mind roam around on its own without a leash, or getting out of town for the weekend. I try to pay attention to what resets and resuscitates me so the options continue to increase.

What activities push your reset button? At this time of year, when busyness can feel unavoidable in spite of our best intentions, being able to push your own button is a good thing.

Personality Tests

To continue from the last article’s theme of hidden dimensions, how about uncovering more of your own facets? Online personality tests make self-discovery easy. Clarify what you already know about yourself. Thrill to new revelations. But, above all, have fun. You can always ignore any results that don’t make sense for you. No one is hovering nearby with a pen and a clipboard.

The links below lead to free tests that provide instant results.

Similar Minds provides enough tests to keep even the most die-hard self-explorer busy for hours.

Eclectic Energies’ Eneagram test offers two options: the classical test and the test with instinctual variant included. Use the instinctual variant option for information about your instinctual subtype.

The Art Institute of Vancouver offers a Right Brain vs. Left Brain Creativity Test. The short introduction to the test makes it clear that the Art Institute is biased toward a result of Left Brain, but don’t let that stop you from loving your own honest results – the world needs all kinds of brains.

Human Metrics offers online personality, relationship, and entrepreneurship tests, including the Myers-Briggs test (which they sometimes call a Jung typology test).

Strengths Finder 2.0 is the exception in this list of otherwise free tests. The Strength Finder test was developed by the Gallup Poll folks to help people uncover their top five natural talents. They contend that focusing on developing natural strengths results in much greater success than trying to develop weaknesses. The price of the test is the cost of the (small) book, StrengthsFinder 2.0. The insights, for me, have been well worth the price, to the point that they were instrumental in my decision to start this website, which provides me with limitless joy. It feels fabulous to focus on what I naturally love to do. I wish the same for you.

Photo by Michael Mundhenk.

Hidden Lives Revealed

Humans survive through automatic judgment – our minds excel at making instant assumptions. Not that cave – smells bad. He creeps me out. She’s hiding something. All fine and good, until we ignore input that challenges those assumptions.

In the serene first-class compartment of a TGV train in France last summer, the French businessman next to me exuded citified refinement. Extraordinary suit, laptop computer, file folders, serious focus, important work, all very contained and orderly and foreign. A bit scary, actually. Then his cell phone rang. Our compartment was filled with the sound of a crowing rooster and I had to add another facet to my view of the man, a facet involving a country house he pined for, or a dream of chucking it all for life on a farm.

People reveal themselves truthfully all around us all the time, revealing infinite dimensions. What data do we pass off as irrelevant, when actually it unfolds and complexifies? How paradoxical is the truth?

“We don’t see things as they are, we see them as we are.”

~ Anaïs Nin

Interview | Paulina Bustamante

Paulina Bustamante pursues her dream of acting with an all-encompassing joy that’s infectious. She’s honing her acting skills at Vancouver’s Lyric School of Acting, using her high sensitivity as an asset. In person, Paulina shines (even more so when she’s talking about acting). Her hands gesture. Her eyes sparkle and connect. She laughs often and gives her attention generously.

Tell me about the combination of acting and being highly sensitive.

An image that came to me about being an actor is that all of my nerve endings have to be right on my skin, opening up. I’m learning how to do that, how to open my nerves and bring them to the surface. This is important because nuances are important in acting – people often feel more than one emotion at a time. When I’m acting I need to have as much variety of emotion available to me as possible, and increased sensitivity helps me with that. Right now the process of acting in this way is new enough that there are only so many emotions I’m comfortable bringing up. The way I develop my skills in this area is by acting with my scene partner. I have to express myself and also be able to receive and respond – all with as much nuance and emotional variety as I can bring to the process. For instance, rather than acting just angry, I can slice up the anger into variations on anger, adding other emotions to the mix. I can split the emotions I’m expressing up into finer and finer layers. Hopefully, then, when someone sees my performance, they won’t see a whitewash of anger, but something much more nuanced than that.

Being in the classroom has shown me how I can apply my high sensitivity, how I can make it work for me. It’s given me more control and helped me to be out in the world – buffeted in a line-up at the store, for example – and not be as covered in raw nerves. Being an HSP [highly sensitive person] out in the world can still feel difficult, but in acting class (and on film sets, hopefully), all the depth and tone and sound that comes to me as part of having a sensitive body is in the perfect context. I’m able to turn up my high sensitivity during a performance. Let’s say my acting partner even just breathes on me. If I let myself be affected and vulnerable and sensitive, that informs and influences my performance, adding another layer of nuance to the moment.

Actors have different ways of accessing a scene, of getting into the place that will, for them, result in honest and true acting. You can see the difference. You can tell when an actor is grounded in truth or not. I’m still learning how to enter into a scene, and by constantly allowing my body to be sensitive, letting all of my senses be open, I get a lot more toeholds for getting into a scene with honesty. For me, the more I can sense, the more toeholds I have. I’m learning how to just be nudged into that space, how to be so receptive and responsive to my instrument – my body – that my entry into a scene is subtle, not using up too much of my energy. Then I have more energy for the scene itself.

Something I’m starting to tackle now is endurance – how to maintain and develop the ability to be consistent with my energy over time. It requires a lot of energy to be in a scene, to be in a play for two hours, and being an HSP means I need to be informed and ready to handle my sensitivities in a performance context. Since acting is my work, that’s really important. Being reminded that acting takes energy, even for non-HSPs, helps me accept the challenge of learning endurance.

Is there anything else you want to say about acting?

I love acting. It brings me joy. It’s how I really learn to be human, and it makes me appreciate humanity more. Acting works everything out. It’s physical, emotional, spiritual, and mental and it challenges me on all of those levels simultaneously. It’s extraordinary. I highly recommend it for everybody. I love it that for ten hours a week I’m in a room with people and all we’re doing is talking about emotions, reviewing circumstances in which we feel emotions, exploring historical contexts for characters, and learning how to express ourselves. All of that sharing about all of those things is the best jumping-off place for me for gaining a holistic education. When I need to know about a character I need to know so much about them that – through that learning process – I learn about myself. I’m constantly being made aware of what I know and what I don’t know, and going to the edge of what I know. In the classroom, I witness that happening for other people, too. I always leave class feeling in awe of what other people do there. And all it requires is a space, people who are willing and open, and, in my case, an unbelievably empathetic, encouraging, and brilliant teacher – Nancy Sivak, at the Lyric School of Acting here in Vancouver.

What message of encouragement would you like to give to other highly sensitive people?

If you do sign up for an acting class, it will be challenging, but my experience has been that the best instructors and the best actors are people who are supportive and encouraging. If you sign up for a class and the teacher is not supportive and encouraging, or is harsh, I would encourage you to sign up for another class instead. Also, taking an acting class doesn’t need to be about the final performance. For me, so far, even though I’m training to be a professional actor, what I learn by focusing on the process of acting is worth it all, is worth all I put into it and worth every penny of the cost of the classes. It would sadden me to know that someone decided not to pursue acting because they thought they weren’t good at it. If , for you, there’s something happening inside, then don’t let it go.

What are three of your most favourite books of any kind?

The Lord of the Rings series, by J.R.R. Tolkien – if you read it, I advise putting it down the second you get tired. Don’t even push on to the end of the paragraph – otherwise, it feels like a slog. The story is strong enough to wait for you.

A Room with a View, by E.M. Forster – preferably read it in one sitting on a rainy day.

Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen – I opened up this book on a rainy day and read it in one sitting, even though I hadn’t expected to.

Photo by Goga.

Why Germany is Great for HSPs

Surprised? I was too when I first started spending time in Germany. Now I want to move there. Here’s a sampling of why:

Quietude is respected. Yes, there are laws about noise, which may not suit everyone, but which means that there are actually quiet times that can be counted on. Also, there’s a general presumption of quietude in most of the places I’ve spent time in Germany, including in cities like Berlin and Freiburg, and in most public spaces like restaurants and trains. After a while, I can feel my ears relaxing as I realize it’s safe to let down my guard a lot more than I ever do in North America.

Quality is assumed. Not for absolutely everything, but for much more than we in North America are accustomed to. The high quality of the food in restaurants, grocery stores, and homes gets me salivating every time. Material things are generally made to last, and they do. And consumers tend to be choosier about what they buy, knowing it may last into the next generation, whether they’re buying a belt, a curtain, or a pen.

Beauty is everywhere. Whether the view is of the big picture (out the train window as the kilometres unfurl) or the details (high eaves decorated exquisitely), the beauty of Germany is balm to my highly sensitive soul. When I spend time with my in-laws in Germany, no matter where we are, in every city or town or village or on every country path, my constant refrain is, “Go ahead. I want to look at this. I’ll catch up!” There’s enough beauty, all around, to fill the heart to overflowing.

Sustainability is old news. Cobblestones everywhere allow rain to penetrate the earth, unlike acres of unbroken pavement. Washing machines are tiny, and whole families are raised on the assumption that small is just fine, and it is. Homes in country villages are crammed together, giving the arable countryside more room. Bicycles rule, and there are plenty of bike paths to prove it. People have lived closely in Germany (as in all of Europe) for a long, long time, and they’ve figured out a lot about how to do it sustainably – they’ve had practice with taking the long view.

Standard windows are brilliantly designed. With very few exceptions, the windows I’ve seen in German homes operate via a clever, functional design that makes me smack my forehead and say, “Why in the world isn’t this the way we do it back home?” Their heavy, built-to-last windows (and some doors) open inward from the top so air can flow even on a rainy day. Close the window (or door), turn a lever, and they open from the side, allowing fresh air and the draping of bedding over the window sills in the mornings.

Trains rule. A map of Germany’s train routes is a dense, tangled affair. The clean trains run on time. That’s superb, but there’s more, from the friendly train staff and the orderly train stations, to the views out the windows and the generally quiet travelling companions. (If there’s any way you can swing a first-class booking, your high sensitivities will thank you profusely the whole way. First-class compartments are marvelous oases of quietude and spaciousness. Eurail passes for non-European residents, purchased before you leave home, are a reasonably priced way to achieve first-class train travel in Europe.) Besides the trains, public transit is well developed in Germany, dependable and full of character – and I mean that in the very best of ways.

I’ve also spent time in France. It’s beautiful, yes, and lively, and there’s much that’s wonderful there. But I find that France is also loud, and messy, and has other qualities that challenge my senses, the accumulation of which becomes overwhelming too soon. My high sensitivities and I can stand only so much of France before I’ve had enough and find that I’m pining for Germany. Again.

Train photo by Michael Mundhenk.

Book | One Small Step Can Change Your Life

Preparing for an earthquake is too freaky. I only accomplished it by taking what I called nanosteps, steps so infinitesimal I was done before the heebie-jeebies set in. Author and artist SARK, in her book Make Your Creative Dreams Real, calls such small steps microMOVEments. Robert Maurer has gone even further and written a book on the topic of kaizen, “the Japanese technique of achieving great and lasting success through small, steady steps.”

Maurer’s One Small Step Can Change Your Life: The Kaizen Way inspires through the author’s humbleness and the examples provided. Do you have trouble exercising regularly? March in place in front of the television for one minute every day for a month. Do you have trouble keeping the house clean? Set a timer for five minutes and tidy up, stopping when the timer goes off. Are you looking for love but not finding it? Spend two minutes a day musing on the question What would my ideal mate be like?

The surprising thing is that small steps often lead to lasting success when big steps don’t. It’s all about sneaking successive tiny steps past the fight-or-flight response to the fear triggered by the prospect of big change.

Instead of longing for real change that never seems to happen, tap into the awesome power of the tip-toe.

“The little steps of kaizen are a kind of stealth solution…. As your small steps continue and your cortex starts working, the brain begins to create ‘software’ for your desired change, actually laying down new nerve pathways and building new habits. Soon, your resistance to change begins to weaken. Where once you might have been daunted by change, your new mental software will have you moving toward your ultimate goal at a pace that may well exceed your expectations.”

~ Robert Maurer, One Small Step Can Change Your Life: The Kaizen Way

Beating the Family Holiday Blues

People are unreasonable, illogical, and self-centered. Love them anyway.

~ Mother Teresa

Five ways to beat the family holiday blues:

1. Ask about what you want to know. What’s it like having a second husband? How did you survive the war? Why does Aunt Mabel dislike you so much? Who was your first love? Can I borrow the car?

2. Convince your favourite person at the gathering to do something alone with you. Take a walk. Go out for tea or cocktails. Hang out at the local bookstore together. Play Frisbee in the park in the snow. Visit the wax museum.

3. Watch The Family Stone. Watch it alone and cry. Or laugh until you cry. Watch it in the room that will gather a crowd. Try out the recipe for the Morton Family Strata (see the DVD special features). Watch it again. Show it as a double feature with Dan in Real Life.

4. Get a hotel room. Do it from the beginning. Or do it after a day or so. Do it for yourself if you need to, when you need to. Even a cheap motel can be a relief. Tell everyone – or don’t. Invite someone else who appears to need a break over for pizza and frank talk or silliness.

5. Examine yourself. Write 100 pages in your journal (at the dining table while they’re cleaning up around you, while everyone else is watching TV, in your hotel room bed) in answer to the question What false expectations about my family do I need to let go of?

Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.

~ Carl Jung

Personal Symbology and Intuition

“One of the first steps in developing intuition is to learn your own symbolic language. With practice you’ll learn that certain symbols or impressions are, for you, highly reliable signs of certain things.”

~ Laura Day, Practical Intuition

In Hawaii, when I was seven, I found a dollar bill on the sidewalk not far from a statue of King Kamehameha. I felt as though he’d given it to me personally. That got my attention, and I still pay attention when I discover money in my path. I ask myself what I was thinking about in the moments just before the discovery, and consider that the money may be a sign of positivity related to those thoughts. Finding money is sign of positivity for many people. But that’s only the tip of the personal symbology iceberg.

My lexicon of personal symbology, after years of collecting, includes a wide range of whacky things that consistently provide me with useful feedback. Playing cards are about love. Feathers indicate that I’m thinking or moving in the right direction. Bells are about journeys. Worded messages tend to lend me support when I need it. For instance, when I walked past a busy schoolyard a couple of hours after being unexpectedly laid off from a job I loved, a boy yelled into a sudden silence, “You just have to believe in yourself!” I took the message to heart, calmed down, and moved on. In fact, being laid off from that job has only resulted in better things coming into my life.

A simple way to develop personal symbology is to think about an issue you’d like help with, then look around and see what you notice. You can’t notice everything, right? The input from our senses (including our sixth sense) that gets our attention is personal. What comes to your attention again and again? And in what circumstances? Over time, your intuition, revealed in a language that makes sense to you, becomes a powerful tool. You learn to notice what you already know.

“The greater awareness of the subtle tends to make you more intuitive, which simply means picking up and working through information in a semiconscious or unconscious way. The result is that you often ‘just know’ without realizing how.”

~ Elaine Aron, The Highly Sensitive Person

* * *

[17 April 2009 update: The second edition of this e-book is now available, under a new title: Stay Afloat When They’re Rocking Your Boat.] Announcing the release of The Healthy Boundaries Handbook, just in time for the holiday season, when we can find our boundaries challenged by time pressure, visits home, family members we love even though they bug us, and our own longings. Written by Grace Kerina, this e-book is available for immediate download upon purchase. For more information, go to www.healthyboundarieshandbook.com, which will direct you to the book’s page on the Highly Sensitive Power Website.


Looking Up

A college friend of mine would walk along nature trails or city streets with his head tipped back, discovering. He’d say, “Up is a neglected direction.” He may have looked silly, and tripped now and then, but he discovered things up there, with his altered perspective, that wowed us both, and I became a convert.

The saying “things are looking up” means they’re getting better. Maybe it works the other way, too. Looking up, we invite a change of perspective and encourage discoveries that cheer and delight.