Julien Doré, who made himself known after winning the fifth season of New Star in 2007, and which can be found this evening on TF1 in the series Panda (where he plays the main character), released an album last November entitled Impostor.
Why did you call this project that? Because when he emerged, it was a term that was often used to describe him and his meteoric rise. Remarks that touched him, he who calls himself “hypersensitive”. And above all, this father of a little boy born in 2021 is convinced that these criticisms of him, which had an impact on his life, did not reflect who he really is.
This is what he explained in any case for Psychologies Magazine in October: “When I was little, I was very shy, like all hypersensitive people. I took refuge in solitary spaces where I found joy and something to nourish an entire imagination, which is very useful to me today. Except that with notoriety, this bubble could become a fortress, so thick that it could make me pass for a pretentious, haughty, self-confident guy. Exactly the opposite of what I am. And this shell must have made me miss some very cool people and things...“
Julien Doré hypersensitive, like 30% of the population
-Please note, however, that hypersensitivity is not a disease. This is what the clinical psychologist and hypnotherapist, Nathalie Clobert, the psychiatrist Aurélia Schneider, and the editor-in-chief of the magazine assured in 2022. Brain & Psycho and doctor in neuroscience, Sébastien Bohler; in the show Great good for you by Ali Rebeihi, on France Inter.
However, this remains a phenomenon that can complicate the daily lives of those affected by it, particularly in social relationships, exactly as Vriginie Efira’s friend explained. And his comments on the confusion that this can cause were confirmed by Nathalie Clobert: “Many hypersensitive people camouflage themselves. And this creates misunderstandings: the sensitive person has the impression that the other does not perceive their reality.”
Finally, note that, according to several studies, 15 to 30% of the world population is hypersensitive. A hell of a figure, even if it remains a minority. Which then explains why these people are sometimes misunderstood…