December 11, 2025
I've long believed there to be a strong connection between people with C-PTSD and HSP. HSP is "Highly Sensitive Person". Unlike C-PTSD or ADHD, HSP is not a condition that requires healing or support, it's an attribute that defines our identities, like how tall we are, or what color our skin is. Everyone is born with some level of sensitivity, and about 30% of all humans are more sensitive than the remaining 70%. When a child is born with higher sensitivity, then we can be more easily traumatized by people who torment us for that superpower from the beginning.
I have a confession to make: I sometimes dislike wealthy people because I'm not wealthy like them. I admit to a jealousy there. I liken this to the narcissistic, low sensitive adults who give birth to highly sensitive children and end up hating us because we have something they can't achieve: They can't feel life, love, and joy like we can, and they know it. One of the most prolific attributes of narcissism is jealousy. Narcs are insatiably jealous of anyone who is smarter, prettier or more loved than they are, so they take advantage of their size, and torture us indefinitely while we're small and in their care.
I am one of 5 children and I am also the most sensitive of the 5, and I am also the one they all targeted and belittled and treated like I'm too stupid to handle life. What psychologists call "the identified patient" in the family is the one who everyone automatically blames all their problems on, and I see a correlation between my hightened sensitivity and the abuse they lobbed on me for 50 years until I walked away and changed my phone number. Imagine a family that feels so bad about their own lives that they need someone to shift that hatred onto. Who would they pick? Some insensitive child who doesn't respond to their abuse? Or to the sensitive one who is easy to hurt? Easy to get reactions from? If you want to abuse someone, you want them to feel abused, right? So I was the one who was easiest to abuse because I was the one most easily hurt by abuse. I became the identified patient.
During the past few days I've turned my obsessive need to find agency by learning and reading as many books as I can find on any topic, to the topic of HSP. I went out looking for a book that would teach me some good stuff about HSP. The internet guided me toward a small, easy to read little book called Sensitive, written by Jenn Granneman & Andre Solo. Within only the first two chapters I'm almost in tears as I read the reasons...the actual, scientific reasons...why being HSP is a good thing. It's considered a super power. Most of the world's most influential characters throughout history were HSP.
When a person is born sensitive, and then raised in danger, they hone that sensitivity to become literal superheroes, as we become far, far, far better at noticing details, and linking thoughts, and preparing for trouble, and protecting ourselves from dangers less sensitive people don't even know they need protecting from. We're alert, aware, cautious. We're survivors. We are less apt to follow the crowds off a bridge because we're asking, "why is everyone jumping?" We aren't followers. We're critical thinkers.
Many of us have been lied to by being called "Too sensitive" all our lives. In the story of Jesus, he was tortured and killed for being sensitive and "awakened". Today's low-sensitive people have turned "awakened" into a four-letter swear word, "woke." They criticize and laugh at people who are wiser, kinder, more compassionate, empathetic, and more aware of real life than they are. I see that as another example of how it's just easier to make fun of sensitive people than it is to make fun of numb people.
What's happening within me this day is I'm finding another avenue for self-forgiveness. The more I read into this one book, (and I plan to find more books when I'm done with this one), the more I find an ability to forgive myself for being kinder, more compassionate, and more "sensitive" than the numb blokes that run around bullying people and calling that "manly."
I've long believed there to be a strong connection between people with C-PTSD and HSP. HSP is "Highly Sensitive Person". Unlike C-PTSD or ADHD, HSP is not a condition that requires healing or support, it's an attribute that defines our identities, like how tall we are, or what color our skin is. Everyone is born with some level of sensitivity, and about 30% of all humans are more sensitive than the remaining 70%. When a child is born with higher sensitivity, then we can be more easily traumatized by people who torment us for that superpower from the beginning.
I have a confession to make: I sometimes dislike wealthy people because I'm not wealthy like them. I admit to a jealousy there. I liken this to the narcissistic, low sensitive adults who give birth to highly sensitive children and end up hating us because we have something they can't achieve: They can't feel life, love, and joy like we can, and they know it. One of the most prolific attributes of narcissism is jealousy. Narcs are insatiably jealous of anyone who is smarter, prettier or more loved than they are, so they take advantage of their size, and torture us indefinitely while we're small and in their care.
I am one of 5 children and I am also the most sensitive of the 5, and I am also the one they all targeted and belittled and treated like I'm too stupid to handle life. What psychologists call "the identified patient" in the family is the one who everyone automatically blames all their problems on, and I see a correlation between my hightened sensitivity and the abuse they lobbed on me for 50 years until I walked away and changed my phone number. Imagine a family that feels so bad about their own lives that they need someone to shift that hatred onto. Who would they pick? Some insensitive child who doesn't respond to their abuse? Or to the sensitive one who is easy to hurt? Easy to get reactions from? If you want to abuse someone, you want them to feel abused, right? So I was the one who was easiest to abuse because I was the one most easily hurt by abuse. I became the identified patient.
During the past few days I've turned my obsessive need to find agency by learning and reading as many books as I can find on any topic, to the topic of HSP. I went out looking for a book that would teach me some good stuff about HSP. The internet guided me toward a small, easy to read little book called Sensitive, written by Jenn Granneman & Andre Solo. Within only the first two chapters I'm almost in tears as I read the reasons...the actual, scientific reasons...why being HSP is a good thing. It's considered a super power. Most of the world's most influential characters throughout history were HSP.
When a person is born sensitive, and then raised in danger, they hone that sensitivity to become literal superheroes, as we become far, far, far better at noticing details, and linking thoughts, and preparing for trouble, and protecting ourselves from dangers less sensitive people don't even know they need protecting from. We're alert, aware, cautious. We're survivors. We are less apt to follow the crowds off a bridge because we're asking, "why is everyone jumping?" We aren't followers. We're critical thinkers.
Many of us have been lied to by being called "Too sensitive" all our lives. In the story of Jesus, he was tortured and killed for being sensitive and "awakened". Today's low-sensitive people have turned "awakened" into a four-letter swear word, "woke." They criticize and laugh at people who are wiser, kinder, more compassionate, empathetic, and more aware of real life than they are. I see that as another example of how it's just easier to make fun of sensitive people than it is to make fun of numb people.
What's happening within me this day is I'm finding another avenue for self-forgiveness. The more I read into this one book, (and I plan to find more books when I'm done with this one), the more I find an ability to forgive myself for being kinder, more compassionate, and more "sensitive" than the numb blokes that run around bullying people and calling that "manly."