Thursday, February 13, 2020


Comprehensible Wavelengths 

“Every time you open your mouth, my skin crawls. My skin crawls slowly like leeches on flesh. I feel buried under the weight of your own embarrassment. I want to stand straight up out of my fucking chair and scream at you. Not out of anger towards you, but in an attempt to direct the focus on me and away from you. Can you not feel everyone’s eyes searing through your soul like laser beams?! Can you not feel what they are thinking? I don’t have a problem with you. However, I certainly have a fucking issue with how you let people receive you. The reason social interactions are so fucking hard for you, is because of you. I know this because I see my own socially based errors and flaws coming to fruition, every time you say something pedantic or stupid in the vein of being unique. I don’t hate you, not in the fucking slightest. I just hate that I have to bear these feelings with you. Look at you, just standing in front of group of people, withering away into a level of embarrassment that is so evident it has become palpable. I would rather be swallowed whole by the fucking earth beneath me, than to spend one more second harboring the emotions that should belong to you.”  

That’s the dialogue that my brain came up with as I sat there scratching at my sweaty palms, biting my nails, and grinding my teeth like I needed a crack rock as I anxiously watched one of my classmates deliver one of the most cringe-worthy, “Hi, my name is..” PowerPoint presentations I have ever borne witness to. Apart from his overtly aggressive, “Thank me for my fucking service” undertones that made me want to violently puke on the floor until I subsequently died. This man felt a need to give the class an in-depth explanation of how he was conceived, followed closely by a collage of photographs that explicitly detailed every medical ailment that he had ever faced. At this point, I was so embarrassed for him that I had to say something. I felt as if I didn’t and I held my breath any tighter, I might physically implode. Instead of referring back to any of the thoughts that I had in the paragraph above, or even holding my tongue until I could speak to him privately, or even better yet, not saying anything at all. I audibly said, “Everything you say makes my butthole pucker.”

Generally speaking, that particular combination of words rarely goes unnoticed or without some kind of reaction. The reaction was laughter and deep down I fucking hate that. There’s no reward to be found in humiliating someone else. If I truly was embarrassed for this man, then why did I speak more of it into existence? I was convinced that it was due to the fact that I am just somewhat of an asshole. And while that simple bit of self-analysis may hold more truth than I would like, I recently told that story while we were recording the newest episode of the podcast and I was informed of a new term for what I might be. Empath.     
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While the term empath certainly seems more flattering than, asshole. I still have my reservations on how I feel about it. That’s primarily considering I had never even heard of it before this past weekend.

But I figured I’d do my research and see if I really had the traits of an empath. What I found was certainly interesting.

The article I found was from a website named, “Highly Sensitive Refuge”. The webpage opens up with an image of a woman who looks like she is truly at peace. She had flowers blooming from her face and she appeared to be taking a long, deep inhale of what I can only imagine is nothing but the freshest of fresh air. “Is this what being an empath looks like? I’m definitely in the wrong place.” I thought to myself, as I began to explore the attributes of this potentially new character trait of mine.

 This article below the image described the thirteen most common traits of empaths. I’m not going to bore you to death with all thirteen, but I definitely found at least one that was applicable to me. The article touches on how empaths are able to not necessarily just exercise empathy, in terms of relating to someone’s emotional expression. Instead, they can embody the emotions of those they feel concern for. That particular statement is what really hit home for me. When my classmate was making an absolute ass hat of himself in front of an entire room of people, I didn’t feel for him. As strange as it sounds, I felt as though we were both up there being ridiculed under the whispers and thoughts of all our uncomfortable classmates.   

I know this feeling of ridicule, all too well. For Christ’s sake in middle school (of all times) I was not only overweight, I was a chunky little emo kid, to boot. When you have the biggest titties in the eighth grade, and you have purple hair, your existence is pain. Believe me when I say, I know what the receiving end of embarrassment looks like and feels like. I hate it with every fiber of my being. And watching my classmate do it to himself was like watching someone slowly lower their head into a fucking wood-chipper.  
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But that’s not really the case, is it? There’s no wood-chipper. There’s no imminent threat to either of us. This young man is in no danger of hurting himself or anyone else by just being horrendously abrasive and overbearing. To some extent, I’m probably projecting my own insecurities on some guy that’s just trying to tell his story. But I physically can’t help but feel the way I do towards people that are unintentionally subjecting themselves to the throws of humiliation. And that is in no way an excuse for my outburst, or am I saying that I am in any way, shape, or form an empath. I feel as though, I may still be leaning farther into the territory of, “terribly judgmental” or “a little bit cynical” than I am towards anything else.

I dug a little deeper into the idea of “why?” As in, “Why do some people feel this way when others don’t?” I found out that there have been no scientific or psychological proofs of a true empath. And the study of hyper-empathy has not been entirely conclusive, either. So, the conclusion here is, I’m still very fucking confused. If for nothing less, this has been an eye-opening experience into how I perceive my interactions.

I’m not going to drag you any further into my journey of self-discovery. Because if I’m being honest, I find this ride to be very confusing as well. Nonetheless, I thank you for entertaining my mind as it pondered over one of life’s oldest questions, “Am I an asshole, or not?” 

Sources 



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