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Been thinking a lot lately about something that most people actively avoid talking about. We're conditioned to see pain as the enemy, something to escape at all costs. But what if embracing pain is actually the path to real freedom?
Here's what I've noticed. Pain shows up in everyone's life - physical, emotional, loss, failure, whatever form it takes. The natural instinct is to run from it, to fear it, to build walls around ourselves so we don't have to feel it. We treat it like an invader we need to defeat. But that resistance? That's actually what creates the suffering.
The shift happens when you stop fighting it. When you acknowledge pain instead of denying it, when you lean into discomfort instead of bracing against it. I'm not saying the pain magically vanishes. It doesn't. But something changes in how you experience it. You stop treating it like an enemy and start seeing it as information, as a teacher showing you where you need to grow.
Embracing pain in this way is counterintuitive because it feels harder at first. You have to be willing to actually feel what you're trying to avoid. But here's the paradox - that's where the freedom comes from. When you can sit with discomfort without running, when you can face your vulnerabilities without fear, what's left to hold you back?
Think about it. If you can lean into the most uncomfortable moments without collapsing, if you can experience pain without letting it destroy you, then fear loses its grip. You're no longer spending energy trying to avoid what's inevitable. You're just living.
This doesn't happen overnight. It takes real courage to change your relationship with pain like this. But the payoff is huge. You get to actually experience your life fully - the good and the difficult - without constantly bracing for impact. You transform what could be suffering into something that actually makes you stronger.
So maybe the real question isn't how to escape pain. Maybe it's how to make peace with it. That's where the actual freedom lives.