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How Opposites Offend Each Other — and How They Can Avoid Doing That: Intuitives vs. Sensors

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  Intuitives and Sensors rarely clash over values — they clash over how reality should be described . Sensors trust what’s tangible; Intuitives trust what’s possible. Each believes they’re being clear; each feels the other is being dismissive. Offense arises not from disagreement, but from translation failure . How They Offend Each Other 1. The Intuitive’s Abstraction Intuitives speak in patterns, metaphors, and possibilities. To Sensors, this can sound vague, impractical, or even condescending — as if the Intuitive is floating above real life. When an Intuitive says, “Let’s look at the bigger picture,” the Sensor may hear, “Your details don’t matter.” How it offends: The Sensor feels dismissed, unseen, or undervalued for their realism. The Intuitive feels misunderstood, accused of being unrealistic. 2. The Sensor’s Literalism Sensors speak in facts, examples, and specifics. To Intuitives, this can sound rigid or unimaginative — as if the Sensor is missing the forest for th...

The Shame of ADHD — When the World Misreads You

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  ADHD doesn’t just make life harder. It can make life lonelier. Children with ADHD often learn early that their energy, curiosity, or forgetfulness annoys others. They’re told to “try harder,” “sit still,” “pay attention.” When they can’t, classmates roll their eyes, teachers sigh, and parents worry. The message lands quietly but deeply: You are too much, or not enough. How Shame Starts in Childhood Kids with ADHD are easy targets for teasing. They interrupt, forget, lose things, blurt out answers, and sometimes cry when they didn’t mean to. Other children notice — and in the social economy of school, difference becomes weakness. “Why can’t you ever remember your homework?” “You talk too much.” “You’re so weird.” Each comment chips away at self‑worth. By adolescence, many kids with ADHD have learned to mask — to hide their real selves behind humor, silence, or perfectionism. They stop asking for help because help feels like exposure. How Shame Grows Up Adults with ADHD face a subt...

🌿 Slowing Down with Age — For the Right Reason: To notice the beauty you once rushed past

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  There’s a kind of slowing down that feels like defeat — the kind that comes from guarding every ache, anticipating every twinge, shrinking your world to avoid discomfort. That’s not the slowing down I’m talking about. There’s another kind — a wiser kind — that comes from finally having lived enough life to appreciate it. Slowing down because the morning light on the kitchen counter is worth noticing. Slowing down because the memories you carry are richer than any hurry. Slowing down because you’ve earned the right to move through the world with intention instead of urgency. This isn’t about giving in to age. It’s about growing into it . It’s choosing to walk a little more slowly not because you must , but because you can — because you finally understand that the world is full of small, exquisite details that only reveal themselves when you stop racing past them. It’s pausing to remember the people who shaped you, the places that held you, the moments that changed you. It’s letti...