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A Dozen
Strategies for Growing Through the Pain
By Kathleen A. Brehony, PH.D. 1. Discover a Larger Perspective Growing through suffering requires shifting our outlook from one in which we feel alone to one in which our experiences, even difficult ones, are related to something larger. Removing your pain from your own dark isolation taking a longer view will help you put your suffering in a new context, and you will see your life as part of a larger plan. Suggestions:
Seeing the suffering of others puts our own trials in a new perspective,
teaching us that we are not alone. Empathy is a natural element of human
nature we're prewired to care about each other. When you act with compassion,
you will assume responsibility, respect, and commitment to those suffering.
And when best expressed, your compassion flows toward yourself as well
as others.
A great deal of life's suffering is unavoidable, but there are two areas
of our lives in which we often create great and which each of us has the
power to change: "preventable suffering" and self image. "Preventable suffering"
describes the terrible outcomes that result from decisions, choices, and
behaviors that we know will lead to pain, such as
Mindfulness is truly living, being fully alive in every moment and appreciating
each for what it is. When you enter deeply into each moment as it occurs,
you will more clearly see the true nature of reality, and it is this insight
that will liberate you from suffering and pain.
Grief is a natural and normal response to significant loss and let yourself
experience it. Know that there is no prescribed way to feel or a timeline
to follow. Let your grief chart its own course.
"Container" suggests the importance of relationships in holding
us together or enclosing us in a space filled with love and belonging.
Inclusion in a group, a clan, a tribe, a family is a human necessity; we
need the container of love and inclusion that stems from these groups to
help us get through our suffering. Build and nurture your containers. Suggestions:
The power of the mind, of consciousness, is the only equipment we need
to grow through suffering and find happiness. Through practice, we can
learn to train our minds to see deeply into the true nature of things.
Refining such mental states as compassion,
kindness, counting one's blessings, and seeing the larger picture will
lead you to a more optimistic view of life in general, and your own in
particular. With optimism as your guide, you will see the future as worthwhile,
and know that present problems will pass.
Particularly during difficult periods, our heroes can serve as our companions,
illuminating the paths before us. Reflecting on their journeys allows us
to connect with the heroes within ourselves. Suffering puts you on the
path of the hero and your success along the way will be determined by the
choices you make.
Humor and laughter are powerful strategies for dealing with life’s worst
situations, capable of reducing stress, boosting the immune system,
and easing suffering. Even in the midst of terrible loss and pain,
humor has its own healing place.
The pain of suffering, if left unexpressed, incubates over years, decades,
even lifetimes, and festers into a growing inner wound that will not heal.
Talk about your feelings, haul them into the arena of your awareness. Suffering,
especially, demands its expression. Suggestions:
Silence and the attention to our inner space allow us to create a psychological
and spiritual environment in which prayer and meditation naturally
arise; taken together, they bring mindfulness, concentration, self-reflection,
and a deeply felt connection to God and the universe. These moments when
you are most completely within will be your strongest with that which appears
to be without and beyond your rational comprehension. These moments, too,
will put your pain and suffering in a new perspective, and you will become
stronger for it.
Throughout time, all cultures have sought the utopia of an enlightened
society in which everyone lives up to his or her fullest potential
it is the way of the warrior. The warrior exists within all of us as a
natural, archetypal element in the human psyche. During difficult times,
four defining characteristics stand out as especially important: Awareness,
Bravery, Compassion, and Discipline the "ABCs" of living as a warrior.
When we’re in pain, it’s easy to forget that there’s a warrior inside us
who is up to the task that confronts us. By looking inside courageously,
you will find strength and resources you never imagined.
Every morning upon rising ask yourself this one question: "What do I need to do today to take greater responsibility for my life and live with the passionate vitality of a warrior?"as
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