You pick up on non-verbal communication very well, you can tell what emotion someone is vibing.
Sometimes you wish others would do the same for you - be able to intuit how you’re feeling, so you don’t have to be up front and direct with it - that can feel scary.
You may even be able to discern when there’s something deeper that isn’t getting explicitly acknowledged or expressed. Like if someone is pretending or not being truthful - especially around their emotions.
Tears can come easily and sometimes they elicit a different reaction than desired - perhaps someone reacts with pity when you wanted them to react with deference, respect, solidarity, or something similar.
You may use your communication to try to help manage people’s emotions, but be careful not to take on too much of what actually is not yours - sometimes, you will have to hold yourself back and realize that someone is allowed to feel bad or mad about what you said and nothing is actually wrong and you did nothing wrong and you are not responsible for their feelings - they are.
You may also think a lot about how you feel or how you made others feel or how others made you feel. This is natural, but just make sure it doesn’t go too far - at times your brain is good at obsessing and over-personalizing. It is sensitive to emotional dynamics, but know that it can run towards over-sensitive at times.
You may also just have a natural curiosity and propensity to examine yourself - your emotions, motivations, experiences. You may even keep a journal or consider writing a memoir.
If there is a thought or thing you want to fixate on, your brain has the power to do so. This can be useful when you’ve just become obsessed with a new skill or new subject matter, but can be a loop that’s hard to break and not helpful at other times.
When you’re learning something new, it’s very important you feel emotionally safe and supported. Same for being able to speak directly or make direct requests, it can be hard to be direct unless you are certain that both you and the other person will both feel very safe, calm, and secure during the entire verbal transaction.
Your thinking and communication is the clearest with regular emotional hygiene - tending to unexpressed feelings, finding a way to metabolize them instead of letting them fester or stagnate. Regularly crying is not unusual and quite healthy.
You may think about how to engage in community around shared vision/interest in a way that feels emotionally safe and nurturing for everyone (as well as yourself) as a recurring theme.
There’s an additional piece around being discerning about others and who they truly are - you may romanticize or give the benefit of a doubt a little too generously and it can be disappointing when the person shows their true colors.
There may be times when you don’t mean to lie, mislead, withhold, or “shape” the truth, but you do, and the reason you do it comes from a fear of being hurt/disappointed or hurting or disappointing others. It may almost be like you try to fix the energy or reality with your words, and there is a point where the truth is stretched a little too far by hope or good intentions.