"Most people believe that the person who doesn't react to insults or provocations has grown a thicker skin over time. That repeated exposure to conflict or disappointment has calcified something, creating a kind of emotional armour that deflects pain before it arrives."
"What psychology increasingly reveals about these people is that they feel pain with extraordinary precision. They haven't numbed themselves to injury. They've made a strategic decision... that showing the wound gives the person who inflicted it a map."
"Each instance teaches the same thing: visibility is vulnerability. And vulnerability, in the wrong hands, is a weapon aimed back at you."
Emotional toughness is often misunderstood as a thick skin developed through repeated exposure to pain. In reality, individuals who appear unfazed feel pain acutely but choose not to display it. This decision stems from past experiences where showing vulnerability led to further harm. Each instance reinforces the belief that visibility equates to vulnerability, which can be exploited by others. Thus, many opt to absorb their pain silently, protecting their emotional wounds from being used against them.
Read at Silicon Canals
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