How I handle pain

I have had a revelation. I handle emotional pain the same way I handle physical pain. At first the pain is new and sharp. I drown in it. With physical pain I can shift it into pleasure, and that’s what makes me a masochist. That learned ability to shift one to the other.

With emotional pain I use it as fuel for poetry or songs. But long term pains don’t go away. They fade from my consciousness. I am shifting the emotional pain into a room and closing the door. I do the same with physical pain.

I acknowledge it, but if it is debilitating beyond my control, I shift it to my subconscious. My subconscious then handles it while my conscious mind goes about its business. With physical pain, this works and allows my body to function at a higher level for longer periods of time. With emotional pain it doesn’t work as well.

I need to unpack those pains and work through them. I can use my subconscious for some of that, employing my dreams to work through issues the same way I assign problems to my subconscious to work through. That results in occasional crying jags as my subconscious pushes something to the surface to be dealt with.

This process is thorough and I learn much about myself and my actions but it takes years to expiate the pain. With Sara it took eight years, a catalyst and then two more years to make it where I can remember without losing my shit, mostly. But I understand each emotional piece, each why and each feeling.

So that’s my realization. That’s why my pain lingers, and why people can see me as cold. My pain is a deep river flowing beneath the surface, only occasionally coming to the surface in ways other than writing.

3 thoughts on “How I handle pain

  1. storiesinsidestories's avatar thesecretheart February 6, 2016 / 11:07 pm

    Emotional pain is much harder to take, I very much agree….I think we masochists manage by putting physical pain into our lives, and by turning emotional pain into rituals of one kind or another. But eventually, I think we need to let some of the real pain in….when we are able to. We never lose the masochism, though. Or at least not so far as I know or can see.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Pelgris's avatar Pelgris February 6, 2016 / 11:24 pm

      Nor should we want to. “Suffering brings strength from weakness. It heralds new birth. It guides all beings through life and even pleasure springs from the same well of agony. The dead soar to oblivion on black wings of anguish. To shun pain is to lay stillborn, forever.” – Troy Denning, Pages of Pain

      Liked by 1 person

      • storiesinsidestories's avatar thesecretheart February 7, 2016 / 5:02 am

        God that is so true!

        Liked by 1 person

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