Pain
and suffering are relative. As REM sang, Everybody
Hurts. It helps if we think of ourselves having more in common in these
terms than we have differences.
The human conundrum is literally the broken
human condition – the ravages of the sinful nature, if you’re a Christian – and
just our fallibility, if you’re not.
Pain swarms in many different ways over the
lifespan. Suffering is the generalised trauma that engages us all uniquely.
It isn’t much good to anyone to feel guilty for
not having suffered enough. Or, for that matter, it doesn’t help to feel guilty
that our own prospects or experience of suffering makes it uncomfortable for
others to be around us.
But it is understandable in a highly
relational life to feel different or inferior to others in certain ways at
times. We are constantly comparing, if not consciously, unconsciously. Good
signs of maturity are that we would be a threat to nobody and we wouldn’t be
threatened by anyone. But none of us will attain anything like perfection in
the maturity stakes.
It is normal to experience pain and to
suffer.
Whilst some might seem to suffer more than
others, much pain is relative, and it’s not as if there are massive divides of
experience regarding suffering if we limit our view to a particular culture.
The human experience – the conglomeration of
thoughts and feelings of vulnerability, shame, and need of love and acceptance –
is inherently common. There are some regional differences; cultural disparities
that set us apart, but not so much from our peers.
And our responses to pain and suffering are
remarkably similar, even if we take into account wide-ranging moralities.
Whilst empathy, as an attribute of personhood, varies a great deal, responses
to grief and loss, for instance, are more humanly predictable, except for in the
truly pathological person, the narcissist, etc.
When it comes to pain and suffering we have
an opportunity; to allow pain and suffering to permeate our experience of
living. Not so we are heard whinging and complaining, but that our grief is
approachable and that people know it’s not off limits. We need to be free to
talk about it, listen to people genuinely, and to allow pain and suffering the
latitude of a voice.
***
Pain and
suffering are common to the human experience. Yet, our experiences of pain and
suffering are also unique. Both are true. Pain and suffering are sacred, and
these experiences are to be wholly respected. This is how we dignify people. No
life is a perfect life, yet no life is abysmal.
© 2014 S.
J. Wickham.
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