Looking for the Gold in the Ashes of Pain

When we’re in severe or chronic pain, our normal life is not available to us in the way it used to be. It isn’t the same as going on vacation, or moving to another town, both of which we consciously choose as enjoyable breaks from the everyday.

Instead, living in pain feels like being taken out of life. Our normal life recedes to a distance at the same time that the feeling world of pain becomes incredibly close, imme­diate, and demanding. Pain becomes our experience of life.

We may still be physically present, but most of our en­ergy and attention is busy elsewhere, trying to attend to pain or keep it at bay or heal our bodies or worry about how it will all work out. We simply aren’t available to, or involved with, everyday life in the same way, and it does not feel like everyday life is available to us either.

The time spent in pain can feel like lost time. This is particularly sad when you cannot attend or participate in important events, or when you must do so in your aura of pain. Even when you can participate, pain limits your enjoyment and leaves you with a feeling of not having been entirely present.

A Great Sense of Loss

My time in pain has been particularly heartbreaking for me in terms of being a parent. I have been unable to partic­ipate and contribute in many of the ways I have wanted to, and I have felt an immense sense of loss.

I used to be a world traveler and very active, so I had planned to travel and go backpacking and camping with my son. When I was injured, I was in the process of teaching him to swim, and we’d gotten our bicycles tuned up for some long rides. All that went out the window.


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In addition to that loss, I was no longer able to work, which meant that I lost not only my ability to support my­self financially but my hopes and dreams for my career. This was also true of my avocations. I had begun a series of watercolor paintings and had some interest from art gal­leries, but my injury forced me to put that project on the shelf indefinitely.

Anyone who experiences pain over time has stories like these. You feel sadness and loss not only for the time and experiences that are eaten up by pain but also for lost dreams and goals, as if your connection to the future is being consumed by pain as well.

Antidotes to Sadness and Loss

View Pain as a Landscape You’re Passing Through

Since pain feels all-encompassing while you are experienc­ing it (I think that’s why we describe it as being in pain), it’s easy to lose the ability to imagine anything else. It can be re­ally difficult to remember what it feels like not to be in pain.

One day I woke up and realized I didn’t have a sense of a personal future anymore. I had simply stopped dreaming because it seemed like my life was just going to be an end­less stream of days in pain. So I started to think of pain as a landscape that had edges. It had a beginning, therefore it must have an end. Somewhere.

The landscape was nasty, ugly, and burned-out, but it was only a landscape, a place I was walking through, not the entire world. I told myself that I would eventually reach other landscapes. I was just passing through this one.

This helped restore a sense of having a future. Soon after creating and working with the various exercises and antidotes in this book, I began noticing more green on the horizon of my pain landscape, buds on the blackened branches, and a rustle here and there in the bracken denot­ing small things coming back to life.

Look for the Gold in the Ashes

I have found it very difficult to deal with the sense of loss I feel due to the amount of time I have spent in pain. I have had to reframe the way I see those years. Instead of representing life lost, they represent a different kind of life, equally valuable, even if I couldn’t yet completely see how.

When I went in search of the gold in all the ashes, I realized that my son had learned some valuable life lessons through my painful condition.

He learned to think about someone else’s well-being other than just his own and not to take life and health for granted. He learned that he was important and his contri­bution really counted, since I needed his help daily to do basic household tasks.

Living in pain can give you valuable insights. You will be bringing back a greater awareness of what others suffer and greater compassion for others. You can develop a fuller sense of gratitude for all the relationships in your life and a deeper appreciation for your body.

If you decide to delve more fully into the emotional aspects of being in pain, you may find expression for diffi­cult feelings that need to move on. Working through these emotional aspects can allow a greater sense of freedom in life, even while you are still in pain.

Choose New Meaning

And, finally, when it feels like life in pain is meaningless, I remind myself that it is I who choose the meaning of my life.

I can decide that I have wasted or lost the years I have been in pain, or I can choose to see them as years with a different kind of meaning.

Through my time spent with pain, I have, sometimes begrudgingly, learned a great deal about what it is to be a human being and how to find a deeper sense of an over­reaching arc and flow in my life and the value of life’s nat­ural vicissitudes.

SUMMARY

* Pain is a landscape you’re passing through.

* Look for the gold in the ashes.

* Choose new meaning.

©2018 by Sarah Anne Shockley
Used with permission of New World Library.
www.newworldlibrary.com

Article Source

The Pain Companion: Everyday Wisdom for Living With and Moving Beyond Chronic Pain
by Sarah Anne Shockley.

The Pain Companion: Everyday Wisdom for Living With and Moving Beyond Chronic Pain by Sarah Anne Shockley.Where do you turn when medication and medical treatments do not relieve persistent, debilitating pain? What can you do when pain interferes with work, family, and social life and you no longer feel like the person you used to be? Relying on firsthand experience with severe nerve pain, author Sarah Anne Shockley accompanies you on your journey through pain and offers compassionate, practical advice to ease difficult emotions and address lifestyle challenges.

Click here for more info and/or to order this paperback book or purchase the Kindle edition.

About the Author

Sarah Anne ShockleySarah Anne Shockley is a multiple award winning producer and director of educational films, including Dancing From the Inside Out, a highly acclaimed documentary on disabled dance. She has traveled extensively for business and pleasure. She holds an MBA in International Marketing and has worked in high-tech management, as a corporate trainer, and teaching undergraduate and graduate business administration. As the result of a work related injury in the Fall of 2007, Sarah contracted Thoracic Outlet Syndrome (TOS) and has lived with debilitating nerve pain since then. 

Books by this Author

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