"Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle." - Plato
An idea that people in therapy and outside often struggle with and that can help gain perspective on emotional distress is: pain is pain.
An idea that people in therapy and outside often struggle with and that can help gain perspective on emotional distress is: pain is pain.
In therapy groups that I lead, people are helped to share stories
of the pain that they have experienced in their lives. Sharing the burdens we
carry is therapeutic, as is providing support to others as they share them.
However, as we listen to each others' stories, our analytical parts of the self
begin to evaluate and categorize. We find ourselves tuning into the judgmental
voices comparing others negatively in relation to our stories. We think of
examples such as:
“Is that it? Your mother just shouted a lot at you?”
“You were just bullied in school. Give me a break.”
This perspective is not helpful. Emotional abuse, such as constant
shouting, can be equally traumatizing as physical abuse. In fact, some
research has shown that counter-intuitively, emotional abuse alone is more
damaging that emotional abuse coupled with physical abuse, presumably due to
the relational aspects of physical abuse. Similarly, a person may only be able
to verbalize only one set of abusive experiences at this time, such as being
bullied. Looking down on others’ pain can give a feeling of superiority, but it
is likely to be unproductive in the long term.
The same experience can occur from the opposite standpoint of
viewing our experience as less negative as compared to others. Examples
include:
“Oh my God! She was sexually abused as a child AND a victim of domestic violence. I have gone through nothing as compared to that.“
“His father and brother BOTH committed suicide and he is struggling with a drug problem! What right do I have to be sad about my life?“
Looking down on our pain can be just as unskilled. Listening to the traumatic stories of others and consequently minimizing our own, can only provide temporary relief. This only contributes to masking our own struggles and is of no help in the moments when we do encounter our own pain. In the end, both types of comparisons are unhelpful and possibly misleading.
Modern neuroscience tells us that emotional pain is not even
different from physical pain. The same regions of the brain appear to be
involved in both types of pain. The differences in pain may be considered more
due to their frequency, intensity and duration rather than their causes. However,
in most cultures, we are taught that somehow physical pain is “real” but
emotional pain is “all in your head.” We commit, in clinical psychology terms,
what is called a fundamental attribution error in social psychology terms. We
attribute external causes to physical pain but internal causes to emotional
pain, as if we bring only one of these on ourselves.
It can be concluded that rather than
differentiate categories of pain, it would be skillful to focus on the
ubiquitous prevalence of pain. Comparing one person’s pain with another,
emotional or physical, takes away more than it gives. The Buddha’s first Noble
Truth is that “Life is suffering.” Plato exhorted us to be kinder, as he saw
everyone fighting a hard battle in life. Nothing much has fundamentally changed
on this subject in the millennia since these observations were made. Pain is still
built into the human condition. In fact, all pain is pain. Let us respect that,
and then we can go about alleviating it.