Blessed by Pain

in #philosophy7 years ago (edited)

No, I am not a masochist.

Pain is a warning system, an indicator that we should be careful or investigate and that is all. If we twist an ankle, the pain tells us to tread lightly to limit further damage, a stomachache warns of bad food or illness.

Bur pain can be overridden and postponed.

Imagine twisting an ankle very badly while running. Do you stop running? What about if you were being chased by a hungry lion?

Fear is a brilliant delayer of pain. It is so good at it that it will work to avoid the pain in the first place, this is why we fear being in pain. I have never heard anyone say 'When I die, I hope it is excruciating' or 'I am really looking forward to experiencing the pain of childbirth'.

Pain is feared and fear is an emotional pain. Perhaps the oldest of all emotions in my opinion as it is the saviour, the protector, the caution that allows the room for love to be realised. Fear keeps us alive long enough to form bonds and the space to have a chance to comprehend the meaning of love.

The issue arises though when we face psychological discomforts that threaten our sense of self, that being the way in which we view our idea, beliefs and life purpose. These things are at the core of who we are, well in my view, what we at least identify as being who we are.

In the past, the curious Georges who investigated what that growling sound was in the bushes often didn't make it through to pass on their genes. Those that feared the unknown sound did live long enough to further the species.

But, once emotional pains started to form in humans, the fearful protector began overreaching in its job description and applying its skill to places it was never trained to protect. So, a heavy handed approach gets applied instead of a cautious advance into the bushes.

Whenever our sense of self gets questioned heavily, fear's need to protect the 'self' kicks in and attempts to repel the threat. Before, it would run away but this tactic that works against dangerous beasts has proven counter-productive with humans discussing ideas.

So instead, it is a psychological retreat from the unknown or unwanted. Again, becoming catatonic is unfruitful so fear recruits other emotional states, such as denial and anger to help combat the intruding ideas.

This effectively stops the insurgent ideas but it comes at a cost of retarding mental growth into unknown areas as the psychological unknown always causes discomfort. But, if it is always avoided, nothing is ever discovered.

Of course, discomfort isn't always avoided. Often it is pushed down pathways one step at a time with each building upon the last. Sometimes this pathway leads up a hill of great good or achievement, sometimes the path is a slippery slope of disaster or harm.

It is essentially a process of brainwashing that takes place where each step is further away from the starting point, but one step closer to the next step. The best and worst of us have all taken paths, not always by choice.

And once far enough along those paths, any question that contradicts its position or direction gets batted away from the hand of fear. Beliefs are difficult things to shake when all steps taken lead to their creation.

So here I will leave it. Psychological pain is an indicator that we are hearing or approaching what we do not know, understand or fear it will change us or bring into question who we think we are. It raises the call to fear for protection but it is not fears job. Psychologically speaking, it is curiosity's responsibility.

Curiosity had a reserve role in the field and was only called upon when fear had cleared an area as safe for play. But in the psychological playground, it is fear's turn to take a step back and give control over to curiosity.

A curious mind can explore all of the positions, all of the questions, all of the ideas, beliefs, concepts and every facet of life and always remain safe for thoughts never need become action, and consideration does not constitute acceptance.

Perhaps, if more people learned to trust curiosity and bench fear, anger and denial would appear less and violence would be reduced. We can't have things such as freedom of speech if we do not first have freedom of mind.

So, for me at least, this is the power of pain and why I see it as a blessing. Once we suffer sufficiently, we may become curious enough to investigate if there is another way to live.

Taraz
[ a Steemit original ]

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There is a beautiful book called The Gift of Pain by Paul Brand. Essentially, it is a biographical allegory that details the author's time as a teacher and doctor in India. In his hospital there, he encountered many who struggled with leprosy, both the physical manifestations as well as the negative social stigma. Leprosy can be described as the body not acknowledging places of pain, allowing wounds to fester, muscles to weaken, nerves to remain damaged. A leper's body does not experience these places of pain, and so does not even know it needs healing. Dr. Brand saw the truth in this not just for medical treatment for leprosy, but really the value pain brings to us as human beings. Rather than seeing pain as something to avoid, to fix, to medicate - pain shows us where we need healing. And so, pain can actually be seen as a necessary gift.

Another way of saying the same thing: I had a good friend in college who was medicated for depression. He absolutely hated taking his meds. They worked as intended - he didn't feel low and depressed when on his medicine. But he also never felt joyful or exuberant. Everything just felt flat - neither high nor low. He recognized that sorrow and joy are actually necessary for each other.

Of course, I would also say there can be too much pain. There is definitely a place for medication, therapy, solutions for our problems, etc. My point, though, is that in our culture today we are generally more apt to solve our pains rather than face them and learn from them.

Thank you for both of these examples and adding your thoughts. I meant to reply earlier but it slipped my mind.

pain is definitely a lesson delivery system and I think that many only learn how strong they are where the suffering is deep enough.

In Finland there is a term called Sisu, which is similar to grit in some ways. It is the reserve energy that gets accessed when facing deep adversity. I disagree with their definition though for in my view the energy is always there, I believe it is always accessible, we just haven't learned how unless under extreme stress.

Interesting thoughts, some food for my brain. Thanks for your article.

You are most welcome as always

Thanks for taking the time to write this @tarazkp I really like how you used Curiosity as a function for navigating fear. I wrote a piece a few years ago along the same lines, but used Optimism as the mechanism.

"Optimism is a mechanism, as is fear. The difference in the two is the prerequisite that optimism holds; hope. Fear will protect one from loss and pain but has little power to grow and evolve. Hope overrides fear and has lead our species from the caves to the stars." - Logical Optimism https://medium.com/@technooptimist/logical-optimism-c96616cedf6b

I agree that pain and/or suffering can be a catalyst for change. My friend is a therapist who is fond of saying, "It's not a break down, it's a breakthrough!" It is incredibly powerful to transform fear and pain into gain, although I think time to process is a good thing, too. Great post. Am following.

you are 100% right in my view. and i have some opinions about it too. for example some people desire to never feel pain but its necessary. i have read about the people with analgesia some of them lost tongue and damaged cheeks because of bite they had not control over. have you ever bitten your tongue? how fast your Masseter muscle stops that's speed of the pain.but what i hate about pain is i can't tell it to stop i just understand your message :D . for example stop pain i don't care about this teeth i have to remove it anyway or something like it :D

Very good post in steemit.
Amazing shared I like it.
Upvoted you lets walk

Thank you, it is greatly appreciated.

Хорошая статья!) Спасибо за обмен) Я знаю, что если человек полностью перестает чувствовать боль, он не будет долго жить.

Thanks, and yes, I agree (I think) but living life in a bubble to avoid pain is not much of a life :)

the translation I used:
Good article!) Thanks for sharing) I know that if a person completely ceases to feel pain, he will not live long.

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