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April Snow, LMFT

Helping Highly Sensitive Introverts and Therapists create a life outside the box that allows them to embrace their Sensitive Strengths.

How to Feel More Satisfied in Your Relationships as an HSP

How to Feel More Satisfied in Your Relationships as an HSP

Have you struggled in relationships as a Highly Sensitive Person? Perhaps feeling…

  • bored by a lack of deep emotional or intellectual connection

  • resentful because your partner is not attuned to your needs

  • exhausted from the pressure to maintain a full social schedule

  • overstimulated by your partner’s loud habits

This experience is all too common for highly sensitive folks, whether in a relationship with another HSP or a non-HSP. Being naturally more empathetic and able to notice subtle details such as non-verbal cues, you can make a superstar partner and friend! If you tend to put the needs of others ahead of your own and/or minimize conflict, you probably don’t always feel appreciated and supported in your relationships. Below are 6 ways to feel more satisfied in your relationships.

Be More Direct

In order to get your needs met in the same way that you respond to the needs of others, you may have to be more direct. Being highly sensitive gives you the strength of being able to pick up very subtle cues such as slight changes in body language or tone of voice and strong intuition that allows you to be a master of anticipating needs. Naturally, you might expect the same level of attentiveness from your partner.

Unfortunately, a non-HSP partner may be unable to meet your expectations because their brains are not wired to be as perceptive or your HSP partner may be too overwhelmed to notice. This is why it’s important to be more direct when expressing your wishes. It’s important to set your partner up for success by expressing your needs directly. When partners repeatedly don’t respond to your “bids for connection”, resentment begins to build and create disconnection in your relationship.

Set Aside Alone Time

Since HSPs have competing needs for downtime and meaningful connection, finding the perfect balance between alone time and quality time with your partner can be very challenging. However, if you don’t prioritize alone time, you’ll most likely end up feeling overstimulated which leads to irritability, anger, anxiety, burnout, illness, and so many other struggles. It helps to create a consistent routine for downtime such as setting aside time for yourself immediately after work or scheduling a self-care day once per week.

Allow for Differences

Something I often saw when working with couples is the conflict that can arise because of different capacities for empathy, emotional responsiveness, and overall sensitivity. Since you only have your own experience to reference, you might expect that everyone else has similar needs or rhythms as you do. Whether both partners are highly sensitive or not, it’s important to remember that there will be differences in preferences and levels of sensitivity. If both are HSPs, one person might be super sensitive to bright lights while the other partner isn’t bothered as much but is very sensitive to loud noises. Or perhaps one partner is an extrovert, introvert or high sensation seeker.

There are so many combinations of personality traits and learned experiences, that two people will always have some differences. Overcoming this is as simple as noticing when you’re making an assumption about your partner and instead asking about their point of view instead.

Create Shared Experiences and Intentional Connection

Without meaningful connection in your relationships, you could easily become bored, feel misunderstood, and are at risk for emotional distress. With so many things pulling for your attention these days, it’s easy to take your partner for granted and assume the relationship will maintain itself while you tend to work, family, friends and other obligations. You’re often feeling too overwhelmed to tend to everything equally.

Unfortunately, when you aren’t actively connecting with your partner, the bond begins to weaken and is more susceptible to stress and conflict. In The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, Dr. John Gottman states that “if you don’t start off with a deep knowledge of each other, it’s easy for your [relationship] to lose its way when your lives shift so suddenly and dramatically.”

It’s necessary for HSPs to prioritize what’s most important to us and set strong boundaries on our limited capacity for connection. Reserve a certain evening or day of the week for your partner. Use this time to engage in a fun activity and then spend some time communicating without interruption, perhaps over dinner or during a long walk. Just listen to each other with curiosity and without interruption. Get to know the inner life of your partner (their worries, hopes, goals, joys) and discover what happened in their world over the past week. When couples create shared experiences, they build a strong foundation of connection.

Take Breaks During Conflict

Conflict is a huge challenge for highly sensitive folks because you get overstimulated often and move into fight or flight mode more easily. When this happens, you’ll notice that you or your partner will start to express anger (fight), withdraw by leaving the room (flight), be unable to engage (freeze), or try to smooth everything over (fawn). Due to the intense degree of emotional and physical discomfort a conflict creates, HSPs tend to understate our needs during a conflict and are usually the first to initiate a truce. Ending the conflict creates a temporary solution, but doesn’t prevent the conflict from recurring and opens the door for resentment to build (the ultimate destroyer of relationships).

When you’re both feeling relaxed, create a plan with your partner to determine how you want to manage moments of conflict. What are the rules of how you want to talk to each other, when to take breaks and how to communicate your needs non-verbally if you’re feeling flooded by emotions. Having structured rules around conflict will help the HSP partner navigate the discomfort of fighting with more ease.

Celebrate Your Wins Together

Due to our “negativity bias” as humans, we tend to focus more on what’s going wrong instead of what’s working well. This is a smart survival technique, but you can get trapped and forget to notice the positive around you. Focusing on the difficulties increases anger towards your partner and also creates more stress on your emotional and physical health as highly sensitive people since you feel EVERYTHING more deeply. On the other hand, you can thrive more than non-HSPs when your relationships are going well.

My favorite practice of increasing positive thinking in a relationship is creating a shared gratitude journal, where you each write down your successes and what you appreciate about the other from the previous week. Then spend a few moments reading over what you have each written and celebrating together.

To feel satisfied and connected in your relationships, it’s important to find a balance of quiet downtime for yourself and meaningful shared experiences with your partner. To get these needs met, you may have to be direct with your partner and accept when their preferences are different from your own. When your relationship feel balanced and mutually supportive, you can thrive in all areas.

Suggested Reading

The Highly Sensitive Person in Love by Dr. Elaine Aron

The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by Dr. John Gottman

Hold Me Tight by Dr. Sue Johnson

The Loneliness of Feeling Misunderstood as an HSP

The Loneliness of Feeling Misunderstood as an HSP

You’re Not Overreacting: Embracing Your Big Feelings as a Highly Sensitive Person

You’re Not Overreacting: Embracing Your Big Feelings as a Highly Sensitive Person