Thank You Tami for Your profound interviewing about this, to me very important matter !! Thank You, Susan Cain for Your insight and talking about the topic. I am one of the 20 % and believe me, it has been very hard to be a highly sensitive human being in this modern society...I did not know, what it was that caused me all this bitter sweetness, until I talked to a therapist because of many years of being treated with medicin for depression...I read Elaine Aarons books and listened to her talks on You tube and then I knew, what caused so much trouble in my life...I am 71' now, but it is only 10 years since I found out..My mother called me a soft child in a negative tone..Nobody knew until EA found ou...It is still rather tough being someone who has a great intuition and feeling, hearing, sensing the surroundings much deeper than the 80%..…I "ran into" Echkart Tolle on You tube 6 years ago, when I was in a black hole because my business having cracked and had to sełl everything,..He saved my life ! Please go on sending out information about this state of human life ( for some) I believe that in the first societies, tribes, the shamans were highly sensitive and highly respected.❤️❤️❤️Love, Annabel in DK
This is such an important topic. I think Tami hit the nail on the head when she was talking about how people feel awkward when we are not smiling around others. Not only do we have a cultural inability to embrace the bittersweet, we are always expected to put on a smile. The big danger in this is that there is a feeling of being lost inside of us when the bittersweet sets in. We think that other people’s life is perfect and joyous. This is why everyone else is smiling except for me. So many spiritual traditions teach us that pain in life is inevitable. Yet, our social programming is to only embrace the sweet and not the bitter. When the bitter surfaces, as it always does, we have so few tools for how to deal with this. Thanks for sharing this important conversation.
Oxford just stated there is no way to avoid the Earth baking. Stanford and Harvard have made equally damning statements. I have spent many semesters studying ecological and medical ethics in this college town. Most of the kids in class have plans to end their lives when the food insecurity hits. We are experiencing the most astoundingly horrific self-harm epidemic in all history. The replication crisis gets more disgusting every day. So what are we really doing here?
Thank You Tami for Your profound interviewing about this, to me very important matter !! Thank You, Susan Cain for Your insight and talking about the topic. I am one of the 20 % and believe me, it has been very hard to be a highly sensitive human being in this modern society...I did not know, what it was that caused me all this bitter sweetness, until I talked to a therapist because of many years of being treated with medicin for depression...I read Elaine Aarons books and listened to her talks on You tube and then I knew, what caused so much trouble in my life...I am 71' now, but it is only 10 years since I found out..My mother called me a soft child in a negative tone..Nobody knew until EA found ou...It is still rather tough being someone who has a great intuition and feeling, hearing, sensing the surroundings much deeper than the 80%..…I "ran into" Echkart Tolle on You tube 6 years ago, when I was in a black hole because my business having cracked and had to sełl everything,..He saved my life ! Please go on sending out information about this state of human life ( for some) I believe that in the first societies, tribes, the shamans were highly sensitive and highly respected.❤️❤️❤️Love, Annabel in DK
This is such an important topic. I think Tami hit the nail on the head when she was talking about how people feel awkward when we are not smiling around others.
Not only do we have a cultural inability to embrace the bittersweet, we are always expected to put on a smile.
The big danger in this is that there is a feeling of being lost inside of us when the bittersweet sets in. We think that other people’s life is perfect and joyous. This is why everyone else is smiling except for me.
So many spiritual traditions teach us that pain in life is inevitable. Yet, our social programming is to only embrace the sweet and not the bitter.
When the bitter surfaces, as it always does, we have so few tools for how to deal with this.
Thanks for sharing this important conversation.
Oxford just stated there is no way to avoid the Earth baking. Stanford and Harvard have made equally damning statements. I have spent many semesters studying ecological and medical ethics in this college town. Most of the kids in class have plans to end their lives when the food insecurity hits. We are experiencing the most astoundingly horrific self-harm epidemic in all history. The replication crisis gets more disgusting every day. So what are we really doing here?
If you say the end of all life or 15 meters of ocean rising will lead to beauty, connection and love, you are a blatant fraud.
REALITY>your wish for hits and likes
Wait, never mind. That statement meant SO little sense, you're on your own..