Sensitive Success

124. The weird ones exposed with Birgitta Granström

May 09, 2024 Frida Kabo Season 2 Episode 124
124. The weird ones exposed with Birgitta Granström
Sensitive Success
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Sensitive Success
124. The weird ones exposed with Birgitta Granström
May 09, 2024 Season 2 Episode 124
Frida Kabo

Share your thoughts with us (click here)

Feeling like you don't quite fit in? Join us for an eye-opening conversation about embracing your weirdness with the incredible Birgitta Granström!

From her journey in the corporate world to becoming a digital nomad and now residing in sunny California, Birgitta's insights will inspire you to rethink how you navigate life and human interaction.

Join us as we explore the fascinating world of weirdness, self-discovery, and the power of embracing your true self.

Welcome to the world of weirdness!

Chapters
0:00 - Intro
02:59 - Why is it important to embrace our weirdness?
07:43 - Have you ever felt like you don't belong?
08:53 - Is everyone weird and just suppressing it?
12:51 - How do we know if we are weird?
13:51 - How can we embrace our weirdness?
16:15 - Tips for when you're having a hard time embracing weirdness
18:37 - What's the difference in the world if more people embrace their weirdness?
23:28 - Learn about Birgitta's weird test
29:51 - Why do we need to celebrate sensitivity?
31:47 - Birgitta's final message to sensitive folks
32:59 - Outro

Birgitta's The Web of Weird Test: click here

Know more about Birgitta's work at:
https://www.lifespideracademy.com

Connect  on his social media account:
Instagram: @lifespideracademy

*********

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Share your thoughts with us (click here)

Feeling like you don't quite fit in? Join us for an eye-opening conversation about embracing your weirdness with the incredible Birgitta Granström!

From her journey in the corporate world to becoming a digital nomad and now residing in sunny California, Birgitta's insights will inspire you to rethink how you navigate life and human interaction.

Join us as we explore the fascinating world of weirdness, self-discovery, and the power of embracing your true self.

Welcome to the world of weirdness!

Chapters
0:00 - Intro
02:59 - Why is it important to embrace our weirdness?
07:43 - Have you ever felt like you don't belong?
08:53 - Is everyone weird and just suppressing it?
12:51 - How do we know if we are weird?
13:51 - How can we embrace our weirdness?
16:15 - Tips for when you're having a hard time embracing weirdness
18:37 - What's the difference in the world if more people embrace their weirdness?
23:28 - Learn about Birgitta's weird test
29:51 - Why do we need to celebrate sensitivity?
31:47 - Birgitta's final message to sensitive folks
32:59 - Outro

Birgitta's The Web of Weird Test: click here

Know more about Birgitta's work at:
https://www.lifespideracademy.com

Connect  on his social media account:
Instagram: @lifespideracademy

*********

Frida Kabo:

Hi, it's Frida Kabo. I've had some great conversations with awesome people, and I thought why keep the conversations in the archive. I want to share them with you. So here is one of the conversations from the Sensitive Success Summit. Enjoy. Welcome to the Sensitive Success Podcast, where we explore the unique challenges and opportunities that comes with being a sensitive changemaker in today's world. I'm your host, Frida Kabo, and I have spent the last decade recreating my life. I moved from Sweden to New Zealand and now live in the beautiful bush with my husband and two kids, homeschooling and creating a life and business that works for me with the help of my sensitivity and support others to do the same. I'm excited to share conversations with experts, thought leaders, and fellow sensitive people who also see the world through the lens of sensitivity. Thank you so much for being here, because it means that you're creating sensitive success too, which is precisely what the world needs. Let's get started. Many of us sensitives can feel weird and like we don't fit in. This can be seen as something negative, but in this conversation we're going to talk about being weird and how we can embrace it even more. And today's expert is really weird, and proud of it. Birgitta Gronström has devoted her life to understanding human behavior and decoding the meaning of life. She is a pioneer in the coaching industry, an author, and an early adopter of generative AI. Birgitta spent over two decades in the corporate world teaching personal development, leadership, and coaching. She was a trailblazer in the coaching industry in Sweden, founding the first ICF accredited coaching training program, and served as president of ICF Nordic in Stockholm. Then she left all that to become a digital nomad before it was a thing. And now she lives in the wilderness in sunny California. Birgitta's lifelong quest to answer the profound questions. Why do people behave as they do and what is the meaning of life? Let her to develop an innovative approach to life and human interaction, the Life Spider System, a revolution in psychology and life philosophy. It challenges old belief systems and provokes established social structures, leading us to rethink how we live our lives. And how we interact with the world around us. And I have the honor of being one of the VEGETA Certified Lifespider Coaches. And I just love that you are in, wanted to join this conversation with me. Welcome, VEGETA.

Birgitta Granstrom:

Thank you. And I'm so happy to be here. And I'm proud to have you as one of the Life Certified Lifespider Coaches, Frida. So it's been very exciting. Yeah.

Frida Kabo:

I am so excited for this conversation because as always when I talk to you, I never know what, where it's going to go. But yeah, start by telling us a bit more about yourself and why you think it's important to embrace our weird. Okay. So I think, uh, not

Birgitta Granstrom:

talk that much about myself, uh, except that, you know, everyone who is weird or the sensitive. You know from the beginning that there is something you are different, but it takes you a while before you understand that, Oh, I'm not thinking as, or other people is not thinking as I am. So that's the biggest difference, and then it starts to question, and uh, the most of the weird ones we ask why and how we want to have the deep answers, and then the common traits among all the weird ones. And maybe, I should start with when you describe the weirdness. I mean, if we go back and really check on the word weird, so it means it's a Germanic 1400s, 1200s, uh, word that from the beginning if you check on the dictionary it means have the power to control destiny. Okay, so I just want to start to say that because we need to have another approach to weird. Because weird means that you are allowed to be exactly who you are. And when you are unique and you are sticking out, you are not fitting into the, to the system. And especially now when we are in a huge shift in the society, in the world, the technology, and everything is moving so fast. And to me, the weird ones, and the weird ones, I have also choose to use the word weird because it includes all people maybe who have a label, who are different. Because most are sensitive. I mean, I bring in the sensitive in the, in the weird ones too. Because most of the time, one label is not enough. You maybe have the ADHD, you are autistic, you are sensitive, and whatever. But you have, you are a leader of everything. Yeah. I love what you're saying about being weird and, and the, the deeper meaning of the word and also that you include everyone. It's, uh, with, yeah. Neurodiversity, I guess is, is. Yeah. And you, I, I would, yeah, and I would define the weird ones, they are the highly intelligent, you are sensitive because you have a huge intuition. I mean, you see through people, you smell a lie for hundreds of miles. You know more about people than they know about themselves. You are processing information differently because you can receive so much with all your senses and you have a processing machine. That means that. All, you can pick up information and you can put them together in new constellations. So that's why you also are so creative. And the weird ones also is looking for solutions. And when they see a problem, many other people haven't seen yet, the weird one is there with a solution. And this can be really confusing for people around them, and, uh, and that's why they are trying to fit them into a box and say, Okay, you are abnormal, you need a label, you are ADHD, you need to sit still, and you cannot communicate correctly, because, and weird one, you can skip this middle part. I mean, ordinary people is thinking, linear thinking, and they need to take one step at a time, otherwise they get lost. But for a weird one, they see the problem and here is the solution and everything in between is not interesting. And so, so we communicate and that's also when you meet other weird ones, you have an other type of conversation. You dive right into what's important and you can leave the rest behind. And that's why you feel another weird one and then you, you feel like you have known them like forever. And you are in a deep conversation immediately. So there is special traits, and those traits I, uh, mention right now, you can find them in the ADHD. There are special traits, and it's a genius trait, but the society try to tell you that you are not normal. You need to adapt, you need to sit still, you need to be average, you need to focus. And that's why it's so complicated for neurodiverse. Even the neurodiverse genre right now has started to become a box. And that's why the weird ones is open up. It's not a box. It's a self imposed description of who you are that much wider.

Frida Kabo:

I can sometimes feel like a sensitive that I'm like a social chameleon where I Feel like I, yeah, I can fit in anywhere, but I don't belong anywhere.

Birgitta Granstrom:

That got me goosebumps, because that exactly, and that's the problem the weird ones have, that they can't fit in everywhere, because they're such a brilliant observer, and when weird ones take a room, they are scanning the energy, they are looking at the people, they are listening to conversation. And then they decide, okay, so in this place, I can be this person, but they don't really feel below because they're so good to play role to fit in. And just because they can, and they care so much about other people, they don't want to make others uncomfortable. So it's easier to adapt. And that's in the long run, if you just keep on, uh, adaptive. That's why you also have so many mental issues among the weird ones, because you are holding yourself back.

Frida Kabo:

It feels like there's a, on the one hand, you try to fit in in society, like everyone should be normal and the same, and the boxes, you know, But also, on the other hand, everyone should be unique and you should be, be weird and should take place. So do you think that everyone is weird, really? And we're just suppressing it or?

Birgitta Granstrom:

No, I think there is a difference. And I think that's important. So every single individual are unique. with, uh, with your experience, your traits, your everything. So everyone absolutely unique, but not everyone is weird. So it's a really, it's an important distinguish because something you say, Oh, everybody's unique. Yes, you are, but you are not weird because there are kind of a special species. I mean, you may be, you have the legs and the arms and the head and the, but there is a different species. I mean, it's a dog and a goat and a horse and a cow. Okay. I mean, it's still just animals on four, four legs, and each individuals in between, yeah, you are unique. So they're still, I mean, the, what you can call it, normies, the average people. They should still, they should strive for being unique and have, because they also have trouble to adapting. So we have similars, maybe issues and problems, but it's two different species. And it's the approach, how we solve problems and how we get help to empower ourselves are different. Totally different. And that's also why it's so hard for a weird one one day. And they get maybe a depression or they get in those dark, dark holes to find a therapist or a psychology or a coach that can approach them and understand them. In their awareness, it's really hard. So most of the time the weird ones end up and they are sitting with a therapist and they feel sorry for the therapist and they give them what they want. They are also, because they know what question they want. And they're like, Then they say, thank you, I'll see you next week and they never go back.

Frida Kabo:

Okay. Yeah, it's interesting because I read an article about kids with ADHD, or on the autism spectrum I think it was, and they had done the whispering game, you know, where you sit in a circle and you whisper. And they had split the groups in, into, uh, not autistic and autistic, and both those groups understood each other. But it was when you mixed the people that they didn't understand each other and had more problems than when they were in separate groups.

Birgitta Granstrom:

That was interesting. I am really interested. You can give me more of that so I can read into it. And I think that's the thing what you are saying now, because I can see even the neurodiverse branches or what you call it. They are trying to say, okay, we need to adapt the ADHD or all those with the neurodiverse need to be helped and get everything. But that's not right either, because we need to do it both way. Because even those who are weird, the weird ones need to understand what those average people need. And you, even if you are weird, you can adapt, you, you can communicate, you can learn certain skills. But the difference is right now, it's different. If you learn and you know, okay, now I am playing the game. I do this because I have to, to facilitate the communication with those other people. And understand, an average person cannot understand you because they don't have that level of awareness. And you cannot be mad or frustrated or angry and disappointed or someone who don't know how to do it. I mean, you can't blame a baby for not walking. Okay. That's kind of the same. So I think we have to open up the discussion exactly what they did in this experiment and to communicate it both way and respect and accept the different way of being, but not judge it as good, as bad or whatever, because we can still, we need each other. And there where we have the also the bridge builder in the stuff that we really need to communicate both words.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah, I totally agree. So how do we know if we're hiding our weird? How do we know if we are weird? If we are hiding, if we really should embrace our weird?

Birgitta Granstrom:

I would say the most common symptom, the hiding within us is frustration. It's frustration, and it could be sadness, and confusion. That's the most, the most common, uh, I think frustration is the most common symptoms. Because, uh, and then you can see some, maybe in some kids that they burst out in anger, or they throw things, and, uh, And that's a symptom of that you are, probably are a weird one. I would say that's the strongest one. And that, and then you tell a kid, Oh, you have to calm down and they get punished in school because they are angry. Or maybe hits or slaps in the face or whatever. But that's only the frustration because they are not understood in their way of thinking.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah. If someone is feeling, Oh yeah, I feel a lot of frustration. Where, where do you recommend them to start? How can they embrace their weird a bit more?

Birgitta Granstrom:

At first, we need to spread the knowledge. Weird and the weirdness is actually something to be proud of. And you have to, so The knowledge about it, it's not a label, because still there is, uh, parents can cry when their kids get an ADHD label. Instead of saying, Yee haw! It hasn't become better, but it's still kind of a little bit of that something wrong, because they are define, and even in the neurodiverse world, they define this as something, um, There is something wrong, that's something that needs to be cured, to be medicated, et cetera, et cetera. And we need to get away from that, and see, to be weird is something that actually is good, and it's cool, and it's fun, it's the cool kid on the blocks in the future. And, uh, spread awareness, but if, and when you see it, To take it seriously and say, oh, what if I belong, ask it as an experiment, oh, what if I am neurodiverse in one way, if I am a weird one, if I am different than others. And start to, uh, read, uh, talk to people, I mean, there are so much, ask, chat with T right now. Yeah, I am like this and this and this, what do you think I am? I mean, not for a go ahead to take a diagnose, but increase the self awareness. So, so, I mean, the bottom line, what would you do? Increase the self awareness. Learn more about yourself. Keep on asking questions and know if you ask questions about yourself. If you ever wonder if it's something wrong with me, be sure, it is, but it's not wrong. It's something that's really weird, wonderful. But if you have that feeling, I mean, otherwise you wouldn't feel. And the reason why you feel something is wrong is that you are different than others. And we are still in a society that we judge people as good and bad and right and wrong, blah blah. So it's something to celebrate. And now, I mean, the world is changing and more and more people want, then we have those who want to be weird. Yes. It's, it's a myth.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah. There's someone feeling, yeah, I'm weird, but I can't, I can't show that or I can't, I'm afraid to. To be that, do you have anything to say to that?

Birgitta Granstrom:

It could be a good thing to actually don't show your weirdness everywhere. Because you need to be aware, you will be judged. So you need to use your brain, because the weird ones have a, they have a brilliant brain. And be aware you need to use it strategically. And because, I mean, I can show, if I go out, if I sometimes have to interact with the society outside my wildness life, I am really good on playing the game, so I know exactly what I'm doing and sometimes I have to behave and I know how ordinary people behave in certain situations, what they say in certain situations, not what you feel like. So you need to be controlist because sometimes you don't want to deal with, to be judged and maybe be disappointed or think that people see what you see. I would recommend it. Share your weirdness with people you really trust, that see the best in you no matter who you are, and, or, and that could also be strangers. I mean, that's the reason why I have created the web of weird, the community for the weird ones, and I, we want to conquer the entire world, we will bring in all the weird ones. Because there you have a, a sanctuary for the weird ones, that you actually can just come and join for a few minutes, you haven't seen any of the people, or heard any of the people, know them, but you still say, okay, shit, I belong, there is others who think like me, and just to get that confirmation, maybe just for a few minutes, you know, you can start to walk your own path. You can start to trust your intuition because the weird ones are smart enough. They have gone through all the thinking and analyze themselves and they can find the information. So they don't need an Step one to seven, how can you do the weirdest? Most of the time, they just need to be confirmed in their own thoughts.

Frida Kabo:

I love that. So important to find like minded people, especially when we doubt ourselves, so seeing that we are feeling alone in the world. In the world. Yes. And to see that, yeah. Just like we do here with the Success Summit, like it's wonderful. So to together and, and celebrate our, our unique trait or unique witness or whatever it is. So what, what do you think would be the difference in the world if more people embrace the witness? I think we will have, uh, we will have more happy

Birgitta Granstrom:

people if we have the weird ones. Because something with the weird ones is we love paradoxes, we. Try to see the similarities in the differences. We respect other people's belief system, even if we don't want to go that way. So that could be an understanding cause Right now the belief system in the world, no matter what, what kind of religion, philosophy or what it is, but to think that each belief system think this is the right way and to try to drag in people and believe what we believe do this. And that's why we need to have the books and regulations and to tell them with laws and norms and morals. to follow just to keep them in that box because nothing is really true it's something that's created but if someone feel have comfort in a belief system really it's okay and the weird ones will allow they don't need necessarily to change anything what the weird ones want Everyone should have the right to be exactly who they are and looking for ways to, to get together and co create instead of competition. So and with that, they could also in a short term, I mean, no one would, uh, now this, I mean, this is a little bit of utopia 1500 years, it will change, but no one would ever go to a job. don't like. Because the weird ones, we are here for life experiences. And how many people can we see now who wake up in the morning and don't really want to wake up because their life is, they feel miserable. I mean, for, for the weird one, that's insane, insanity. So, so that should it be and some each and everyone should find their own way and there will be more happy people We wouldn't know have any I know I wouldn't say no and any but less mental illness less sad sad people and more satisfied, happy, more creations.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah, definitely. And that's, that's how I met you as well. Like I started asking what, is this it? Is this how life is supposed to be? And all of those deeper questions that I didn't feel satisfied in my life. And then I met you and like, wow, it can be so much more. And yeah, when I really step into who I am and do these kinds of things that I'm passionate about, I can contribute more. It makes me more satisfied, but also I help other people.

Birgitta Granstrom:

Exactly. Oh, I, I got goosebumps when you remind me of exactly that experience. And so many people have it. Either they, the fiery life is almost, uh, it's gone. Danger is almost not left. And they really wonder, is this it? And it's not. But still, we believe it is a truth that you need to work from nine to five and certain. We don't, they don't even question. We have to do this. We have to live in this way. And you see, no, you don't. There, you have choices, but you need to have support, you need to have, yeah, I mean, that would be the first thing, everyone, everyone, no one should go hungry, I mean, there are so stupid, the resources, the, everything is here to feed everyone, and still we accept that people don't have food, it's kind of, oh, yeah. We want to help and we do stuff, but it's kind of an acceptance. It's the same with war. It's okay to spend money to, to kill each other. I mean, stupidity. So those things would change for sure with, uh, with the weird ones. And that's why we start to, and what you are doing with your sensitive stuff, that's we increased awareness and we have more people, we gave more people confidence and not the people in the linear way or the linear way. Establishment of society, but people who maybe are underdogs or whatever, that have those thoughts and you find lots of those, the weird ones. And when the weird ones stop accepting labels as a limitation, we will see a change. And it will be shaky, especially for the establishment. Because when the, no, none of the old rules is imported anymore, that's scary. So we need to be prepared to even help the transitions for the, for the ordinary people and make it comfortable for them. So we need to have that in mind too.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah, it's a really interesting time to be alive, to see, and to be a part of that transformation. And you also have a test to, on your page to see if you're weird enough. Can you tell us more about that? Yes,

Birgitta Granstrom:

absolutely. And I was just want to say it with now the change in the world and with the technology and the AI right now. AI is here to, uh, facilitate, the weirdness. Because now it means that more people have access to knowledge that was just a privilege for authorities and knowledge has been power. I mean the pen and the power I don't know the, but you know what I mean. And suddenly everyone can get this knowledge and they can get Therapist, or the coach, or the, I mean, whatever they want to be if they have the confidence in themselves. And that's why it's going to change. AI is a tool for this change and for the weird, for the weird ones to move forward and take a place in the world. And that's, I think that's why I protect the AI as my baby. When the ordinary people say, oh, this is strange. We need to regulate and this is a danger and that really upsets me Is that people is complaining about AI and the fear of AI Instead of see what they are afraid of that's going to happen in the future that AI will be in control and Maybe kill us or whatever they are saying That's exactly what's happening now. That's what people is doing now. You are misinformation, duh. The war and control and the power, those are the issues we have to deal with here instead of blaming the future of AI. It's another, uh, other topic I just have to mention so we can, uh, talk about that, but to do the changes in the individuals now, then we, there is no fear of AI.

Frida Kabo:

And just to clarify, AI, you mean artificial intelligence?

Birgitta Granstrom:

Artificial intelligence. I'm sorry. Thank you. It's good, you see, we need to be clarified. Yeah. So it's interesting. We have all the possibilities, and especially for the weird ones, because we can do the intake of the information and use what's, use it for good and spend, instead of spending time on an energy on fear. And for what it might can do. Use it for the good.

Frida Kabo:

I love that. And as always, you, you're way ahead in the future already. So now tell us a bit more about your weird

Birgitta Granstrom:

aesthetic. Okay, so there is a weird test. Do you belong to the weird ones? And you can take a test. And this is, I would say, call it a quiz, because it's not a test. That's what's right and wrong. But this is an educational journey about yourself. So it, I think it's maybe almost 80 questions or statements. And you only have to see, is this you? Is this not you? Or do you recognize you fully? And, uh, you will increase your awareness, so it's exciting to do the test. And in the end we will have, uh, you will get your result. You can even be this weird one. But there is also an, uh, that I really want to protect too, and that's what I call the bridge builders. And those are, you have the part of the weird ones, but you also have a part of the, what we call the seekers or average people and the British pillars. We need the British pillars because you really are those, uh. Who make the words, put words together. So, or, you are a seeker. And, uh, and a seeker with that means you have an ambition to learn, to get to know you more about yourself. And you can develop your consciousness, your awareness, and you will probably develop to uh, to a bridge builder. Because there is, but you need to have the ambition I want to know more about myself, and I, prepared to do the work. Those who is not doing the test or think, oh, this is, I don't, they don't even are a seeker. We put them in the dot point, kind of.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah, I remember, I know that I was disappointed the first time I did the test because I was not a weird one. I was a bridge builder and I think that actually a lot of sensitives are bridge builders.

Birgitta Granstrom:

And the thing, what we have to learn, the weird one, sometimes we are, as you said, too much in the future. We have those big, and we have so many ideas, but it's not always that we can bring them down and really manifest them and give it to the world, because we lack that power. Capacities or skills sometimes. So together with the bridge builders who understand the, you know, now I get goosebumps again. So we have a bridge builder who understands what we mean, but they also understand how do we do, how can we communicate to this physical world and the planet, and how can we make this to happen. So be together with a bridge builder, that's perfect. And for the bridge builder, You'll find you can utilize this weird, crazy side and you feel more comfortable with yourself and you can accomplish so much more because you get inspired with the, with the weird ones. And the weird ones love to embrace the bridge builders and, I mean, empower them to be more weird. So it's an, um, it's a perfect relationship and even if it's a physical human to human, I think the best relationship is with one weird one and a bridge builder.

Frida Kabo:

I love that. Yeah. And it also shows that it's so, so important to really embrace our differences. Yes. You really see, yeah, it's okay to be weird. Yeah. It's okay to be bridge builder. It's okay to be seeker. As you say, it's not right or wrong. It's just that's where we are right now.

Birgitta Granstrom:

No, not to try to be something else, but really figure out who am I? Where am I? And if you can find some, okay, I belong more here and accept that and be proud of that. Then we will have, we have so much more fun together. So then we don't have to reject anyone, actually, if we just have an understanding in both ways or, or, or ways. Yeah.

Frida Kabo:

Yeah, exactly. So yeah, this is the Sensitive Success Summit. Tell us why, why did you want to join and celebrate sensitivity with us? Because

Birgitta Granstrom:

I think what you are doing now, Freya, as I told you before, I'm so impressed and to celebrate. Freya. Sensitiveness You have found a world that people recognize themselves and it's okay to be and if I can contribute to a few people who just embrace who they are and say, that's okay. I am proud of being there. I think that's, this is a community and as you say, I think you are a lots of bridge builders among the sensitive since you were the leader in, of this crowd and we need the bridge builders. Because that was, I'm talking to, to do we advanced in the communities and. As I see the world with those magnetic clusters of those who is contributing to a better world, we have the same big vision somewhere. And if we can go get together and connect together, I think it's just wonderful. So I'm super proud to be here. I'm really, I'm honored that you asked me, Frida.

Frida Kabo:

Thank you. Yeah, yeah. I'm really excited. Do you have the guts to let the weird ones in to your special space? Of course. Always welcome. No, I really love that you're here and I think it's so important. Well, I, I really love your point of view of the world and also it's always interesting to listen to, to you because you have always things that makes me go,

Birgitta Granstrom:

aha, yeah. Yeah. That's the thing, this weirdness, and I love to speak to people who, yes, when you can see their face and that, I mean, that's an empowerment for the weird ones brain to be even more weird. So that's, I mean, that's a really, I feel super motivated and energized when I'm talking to you. Because you are bringing out the best of my weirdness. That's how I feel. That's why I think it's so great to be here.

Frida Kabo:

Oh, wonderful. Is there anything else that you would like to say to those sensitives that are listening to this? I would say try to be even

Birgitta Granstrom:

more sensitive. If you expand your sensitive, sensitiveness with a hundred, who would you be then? I mean, what other stuff do you have there and what would you release and what is it that you can give to the, give to the world? I, I, yeah, I think so because the, now it's more, it's like sensitive or it's hard, it's a heavy. No. There is a light in the sensitiveness. It's a lightness. You can fly. It's an angel's energies and, uh, yeah, movement. Great movement instead of sit still and fly. I think I am so sensitive by bringing other people's energy, move. I think there was a thought right now, I think move, move, because then nothing can get stuck in you.

Frida Kabo:

Love that. Thank you so, so much. I know. Yeah. Thank you for sharing your wisdom with us. Thank you for being so weird and encouraging the weirdness in the world. I love it. And yeah, thank you for the work that you do. It's amazing. Been wonderful, Frida. Thank you for listening to Sensitive Success. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review and share it with someone who could benefit from this message. And come over and connect with me on Instagram at @fridakabo. And remember, sensitivity is neither good or bad. It's what we make of it. Embrace your sensitivity and use it to create sensitive success your way.

Intro
Why is it important to embrace our weirdness?
Have you ever felt like you don't belong?
Is everyone weird and just suppressing it?
How do we know if we are weird?
How can we embrace our weirdness?
Tips for when you're having a hard time embracing weirdness
What's the difference in the world if more people embrace their weirdness?
Learn about Birgitta's weird test
Why do we need to celebrate sensitivity?
Birgitta's final message to sensitive folks
Outro