Bron: May 2006: Comfort Zone ONLINE
(Including at the end the High Sensation Seeking Scale for HSPs)
  (Including at the end the High Sensation Seeking Scale for HSPs)
In the last issue I was reporting on two new theoretical insights  that bear on how science is beginning to understand high sensitivity.   One theory was about the Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS), which may  be stronger in HSPs.  The BIS was originally associated with anxiety,  but now it is understood to have three functions, one of which has  nothing to do with sensing danger, but with simply attending to what’s  going on, including making the best of opportunities.  As you know, this  is something I have always argued about HSPs and have demonstrated with  my own research that unless HSPs have had many bad experiences, so that  they see danger everywhere, they are no more prone to anxiety than  those with a less active BIS.  But HSPs are more aware and attentive  than those with a less strong BIS. 
According to this theory, if an opportunity is sensed, the  Behavioral Activation System (BAS) is alerted.  It wants to send us out  into the world immediately to get what we want or simply to explore.   Those with a strong BAS are naturally more curious, eager to “go for  it.”  This trait is called High Sensation Seeking (HSS, or sometimes  it’s called High Novelty Seeking).  When it was first studied, the high  sensation or novelty seeking aspect was confused with impulsivity and  high risk taking.  A desire for anything, including anything new, will  always be a factor in how much one is willing to risk, even an HSP.  But  if there’s too great of a risk involved, in an HSP the desire is easily  countered by the strong BIS.  
About The Test You Are Probably About To Take 
Hence I had to create a new sensation seeking scale. The revised High Sensation Seeking Test is below.  This test is not backed up by as much research as the HSP test, but  will give you a rough idea of your HSS tendencies.  Compared to other  HSS tests, this version does not have items that imply taking a serious  risk, or very much risk of any kind.   
For example, HSSs are known to enjoy trying “recreational drugs,”  since that leads to all sorts of novel experiences, and a question  about this is on most HSS questionnaires.  But not many HSPs would  answer yes to that, even if they are an HSS too, unless the drug were  safe and legal, which things called “recreational drugs” usually are  not.  So I worded it differently, so that it could include alcohol or  even caffeine.  I also included fewer items about physical risk, but  even then found men scored higher than women.  So I provide different  norms for men and women.  These also are not written in stone—perhaps in  another community and certainly in another culture, different norms  might apply. 
Suppose you are an HSP who scores high on this test, too?  What  does that mean for you?  As with your sensitivity, I can tell you what  most HSP/HSSs are like and see if you recognize yourself.  But nothing I  say will be true of every HSP/HSS because each has so many other innate  traits as well as a vast array of different experiences throughout  their lives.  But in general, again, HSP/HSSs have a strong desire for  novelty and the “good stuff” in life, but are not willing to take high  risks to get these.  Since there’s plenty of novelty and pleasure to be  found without taking risks, HSPs who are also HSSs tend to do just  that—enjoy safe novelty, eagerly go after pleasures that are not  dangerous—and to do this pursuing more than HSPs who are not HSSs.   However, it’s amazing how safe an HSP can make a risky sport, for  example.  I know HSPs who have done hang gliding, and many like to ski,  scuba dive, and ride horses.  But they do these safely.  They may be  fire fighters or work in law enforcement, but they use their  observational skills and low impulsivity to do their job as safely as  possible, and hence more effectively in the long run.  Obviously many  people in these professions live to a ripe old age, so it’s certainly  possible to do.   
Being an HSP/HSS almost sounds like the best of all possible  worlds, doesn’t it?  And I think it can be.  But most HSS/HSPs will tell  you it’s also rough going. 
The Trouble With Being An HSP/HSS 
I have always used the analogy one HSP/HSS gave me, which was  that she felt like she lived with one foot on the gas, one foot on the  brake.  But in fact, both parts are drivers, with human concerns and  strategies for getting their way.  Hence HSP/HSSs more often feel like  two people in a constant argument.  And the HSS part often wins because  in this culture, at least, the combination of curiosity, competitiveness  (more typical of HSSs), and risk taking are all admired more than the  HSP combination of traits.  Hence the HSP part often feels it has less  power and is more often dominated by the HSS part. 
These thoughts led me to comparing the HSP/HSS to a couple in  which one is an HSP but not an HSS, the other is an HSS but not an HSP.   As with such couples, the person with an HSP and an HSS inside has no  problem with boredom, but a lot of trouble with conflict.  So, as with  such couples, the following points apply. 
1.  Look at it as a package deal. What you don’t like  about the other is just the flip side of what you do like.  Your HSP  part is a spoilsport with all its worries?  A hindrance to every plan?   It’s also prudent.  It keeps you safe to enjoy more novelty another day.   Is it indecisive, always wanting to wait and see?  It’s also a good  strategist; it helps you win.  Is it needing all of this down time, this  boring doing nothing that keeps you from being able to join in when  others are out doing new things?  But as it processes, it discovers new  insights and fresh aspects of every situation.  It is finding novelty  and satisfying your curiosity.  It’s just a kind of exploring that does  not require going anywhere or taking any risks at all.  Pretty neat,  once you see it that way.  
Now what would the HSP part of you say?  Does it feel run ragged  by the HSS part?  Feel dragged into risky situations, rough new sports,  travel to strange places where there’s more disease and crime?  Well,  another way to look at that is that the more you, the HSP, tries these  things and is successful, the less risky it will seem next time.  And,  you’ll increasingly see yourself as very competent in all sorts of  situations, as competent as any worldly non-HSP.  You might even enjoy  yourself. 
Does the HSS never allow you a chance to rest?  Well, at least  your life very interesting and full of adventures, which many other HSPs  might envy.  Does the HSS seem to get its way too often, enjoying the  support of everyone around you?  At least it’s keeping you, the HSP,  safely hidden from those who would misunderstand you and wound your  feelings. 
However, you are a little right, in that since the culture  supports the HSS more, you will have to learn to give it a firm NO when  NO it needs to be. 
In my experience, all of this is more difficult for those  HSP/HSSs who have had difficult, stressful lives, so that they  experience the world now as very threatening, which frustrates the HSS,  and without meaning, which alarms the HSP.  They feel more ashamed of  whichever side of themselves they are showing, and more dominated by it,  rather even imagining that the two parts can live together or even help  each other.  Often they use all the activity that the HSS part wants as  a defense against their bad feelings, which are associated with the HSP  part.  The HSP part, in turn, is used to having a rough time of it ever  since childhood, and even of being misused by others and powerless to  stop it.  So the HSP part is given little attention, which allows their  HSS part to wear them out physically until they develop some illness or  chronic syndrome, the only way the HSP can get its needs met, which is  for rest, nurturing, less stimulation, and a chance to process.   Unfortunately, that processing may lead to more bad feelings, so the  troubled HSP/HSS is often out of bed as soon as possible, trying to  escape the HSP part once again.  If the HSP part is dominating, the  person may not leave the bed after all, but the person’s suffering may  be more psychological—panic attacks, agoraphobia, and depression. 
2.  Grieve what cannot be. As an HSS who is also an HSP,  you will always be limited in how much novelty, risk, and stimulation  you can manage.  As an HSP who is also an HSS, you will often be right  at the edge of feeling overstimulated.  Overextended.  Over aroused.   You’ll have to get used to the idea.  Both of them.  You won’t find good  solutions until you’ve accepted your predicament fully. 
3.  Now, get creative. Having accepted what is, you can  begin to plan ways to make both parts of you happy.  You really can.   Look at the happy couples in which one’s an HSP, one’s not.  They find  solutions.  So can you.  Does the HSS like big cities, the HSP find them  overwhelming? 
At regular intervals, let the HSS explore a new city—to find the  most beautiful, quiet spots for the HSP to enjoy.  Does the HSP want to  go to the country?  Let the HSS explore new places each time, those  places that the HSP has a hunch will be good.  Does the HSP want to just  stay home?  Bring in some variety.  Try new foods.  Watch a video the  HSP would usually avoid, but fast forward through the upsetting parts.   Get a pet who is just like you—a peppy pup who loves to roam with the  HSS, but once worn out, will sleep contentedly beside the HSP.   
4.  Use each part to bring YOU what you want. There’s a  you who is neither HSP or HSS.  Did you ever think about that?  This you  has talents, values, and goals that are quite specific, not just those  of all HSPs or all HSSs.  The HSS in you wants to display those talents,  live by those values, and achieve those goals as soon as possible.   Just living this way, living fully, can be a special thrill to the HSS.  
But the HSP in you really wants to be sure it is all done right.   No mistakes due to impulsive decisions, and hence no deeply  disappointing or humiliating failures.  Now, what a winning combo, if  the HSS uses the HSP to notice all the subtleties and only take action  when success is as certain as anything can be by studying a situation,  and the HSP lets the HSS make its move when the time is right. After  all, even HSPs love success.  But they can’t succeed if they don’t try.   The HSS is the one who will make it happen.  As someone once said about  golf, “Every shot I don’t take is a certain failure.”  So YOU chose  your goal.  Then let your HSS swing.  After your HSP takes aim. 
The Other Problems With Being An HSP/HSS: Now That You Get Along With Yourself Better… 
What about others?  HSP/HSSs seem to have a harder time finding  the right partner, because really they need another HSP/HSS, and those  are relatively scarce.  You can imagine the troubles otherwise, in both  cases.  Maybe the worst problem, at least for the other person, is that  the inner conflict gets “projected.”  With another HSP, that person is  blamed for to many of the problems that actually the inner HSP is  causing the HSP/HSS.   “You never want to do anything!”  The same is  true when the HSP/HSS is trying to live with an HSS.  The HSS partner is  the problem, as the HSP/HSS forgets about his or her own HSS part and  complains, “You wear me out.  Can’t we stay home?  You just don’t  understand me.” 
I recall a couple in which the husband was an HSS, the wife the  blend of the two.  They were two journalists, and they happened to be on  a vacation in a remote locale when a terrible terrorist act was  committed there.  As newspaper reporters for the daily paper of a large  city—and the only reporters who happened to be already on the scene—they  had the chance and indeed the news journalist’s duty to report the  event to the world.  The HSS husband was able to write his story about  the catastrophe without too much distress, and was even glad he’d had  this great career opportunity.  The HSP/HSS wife could write nothing for  days (although what she eventually wrote was deeply meaningful).  She  was too shocked, almost as if she’d been in the nightclub herself. 
Talking with me, she realized that she had chosen a career in  newspaper journalism because of her HSS side, but she was going to have  to think twice about the kind of reporting she did in the future, given  her HSP side.  I am not sure how their relationship turned out, but they  certainly learned something about whatever difficulties they were  already having (and every couple has them). 
This brings up the same difficulty with careers:  HSP/HSSs find a  hard time finding work that satisfies both sides of themselves.  It may  be the most important factor to consider when trying to find the right  workplace, the right calling. 
I know you would like advice on relationships and careers for  HSP/HSSs, but it is truly a unique problem for each person.  About  careers, I have noticed that HSP/HSSs seem to make the ideal  interviewers.  They are very curious and like meeting new people, at  least in this structured environment, and they can use their sensitivity  to get into the other person’s mind and ask the right question.   Perhaps that observation of mine will spark thoughts of other situations  in which there’s some protection and structure that prevents being  overwhelmed by constant change, yet new situations are always coming  (new classes if you are a teacher, new patients if you are in the health  professions, new customers if you are in sales or customer service, new  products if you are in marketing, etc?)  
Don’t Hide Either Side 
HSP/HSSs are often able to hide their sensitive side from others,  either potential partners or employers.  But even if you don’t bring it  up initially, don’t pretend it isn’t there.  Bring it up as soon as it  could be an issue.  This was something else I learned from an HSP/HSS.   She’d found she was attracting mostly HSS men because she was hiding her  HSP self, fairly easy to do when you are dating, at least at first.   You’re just busy when you’re really needing time alone, or he wants you  to something your HSP side wouldn’t like.  She said she was just  realizing that hiding her sensitivity was a waste of her time and the  men’s.  She was going to bring it up, the combo, right away. 
I also hope that she was able to convey pride about both of her  temperament traits, and to teach others to appreciate them too.  Don’t  fall into thinking of the HSP part as a limit and talking about it that  way to HSSs:  “It’s a drag that I can’t work all day and party all  night.”  Your HSP part adds so much to the HSS, who would otherwise miss  the subtleties, just plunge into everything, and have that much less to  offer the world and that much less awareness, feeling, connection, and  pleasure.  One thing my research has found is that HSPs feel happiness  more intensely than others.  So, may the HSS in your life, both outside  and in, show you new experiences to enjoy, and may the HSP in you give  you the extra joy to be found in them. 
Now that you’ve learned what it is to be a High Sensation Seeker (HSS), 
take the sensation seeking self-test.
take the sensation seeking self-test.



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