
“Emotional pain cannot kill you, but running from it can. Allow. Embrace. Let yourself feel. Let yourself heal.” ~Vironika Tugaleva
I plodded up the half-mile hill that led to my house, my backpack weighing heavily on my shoulders in the insistent summer heat. The mild breeze that drifted off the Boston harbor was a cruel joke, hinting at coolness but offering no respite.
Recently heartbroken, I felt tears streaming hotly down my cheeks for the third time that day as the pain of my ex-partner’s absence crashed swiftly on my heart.
I reached out to a trusted friend seeking solace. “Sobbing again” I texted her, knowing she would decipher the pain behind my words. She hesitated for a moment before responding: “Duh.”
I hiccupped mid-sob, surprised.
She went on: “Feel it. It’s going to hurt. But every moment you’re sobbing, you’re doing the work. Every moment you’re hurting, you’re healing. The only way out is through.”
I stared at the screen, digesting her words. That was the last thing I’d expected. I’d expected to be coddled or encouraged to look at the bright side. I’d expected to be force-fed an ice cream cone at J.P. Licks.
This was different. For the first time in my grieving process, I wasn’t told to gloss over my feelings with a coat of rose-colored paint. Someone I trusted was encouraging me to feel my pain in its entirety. Through her eyes, my pain was valid and productive—a necessary step on my journey toward healing.
Her direct acknowledgement of my suffering was the permission I needed to truly feel my pain instead of avoid it. Instead of worrying that I wasn’t trying hard enough to be happy—instead of worrying that I was taking “too long” to heal—I felt like I was doing everything properly.
I could celebrate the work I was doing, even when that work was breaking into sobs, for the third time that day, on the half-mile walk home.
My pain and grief had meaning.
It could serve a purpose.
It could serve me.
Since then, I’ve developed a new way of looking at pain:
When we allow ourselves to fully experience painful or uncomfortable feelings, we are doing work. Sitting with our feelings instead of disengaging or distracting ourselves is work.
Once we accept that we are doing work, we can silence our internal critic that believes that feeling pain means we’re “doing something wrong.” Instead, we begin to understand that feeling our pain is important and productive.
When we understand the true nature of our work, we can summon compassion for ourselves as we move through our uncomfortable feelings on the path to healing, peace, and wholeness.
This framework has changed my life. I’ve applied it to my most acutely painful emotions, like heartbreak, as well as milder ones, like unease.
Last month on a stormy Friday night, for example, a tide of anxiety rolled through me. Instead of texting my friends or sweethearts to organize an impromptu rendezvous—a surefire way to distract myself—I turned on my air conditioner, donned the biggest sweater I could find, and cuddled my pillow as I watched the rain streak down my window.
It felt uncomfortable. I felt the familiar tightness in my chest and shortness in my breath.
“You’re being anti-social!” nagged my inner critic. “You’re being boring. It’s Friday! You’re not trying hard enough.”
I took a deep breath and put my hand over my heart. I am doing work, I said firmly into my heart. This is important. I kept my hand on my chest, repeating these mantras in time with the falling rain, until my inner critic’s voice was an echo of an echo.
When I woke up the next morning to a clear blue sky and a bout of energy, I took pride in how I’d weathered the storm, so to speak. I learned that my anxiety was impermanent and, most importantly, manageable.
Then there are those darkest moments of sorrow, the moments when grief shakes even our sturdiest foundations. When we lose a loved one. When illness consumes us. When we experience a tragedy so emotionally excruciating that it redefines our very understanding of pain.
In these moments, when we can’t find a single silver lining for miles, we can summon the courage to sit with our sorrow. We can find solace in the truth that there is simply nothing else to do.
Experiencing our grief—if only for moments at a time—is work. This is the work of living on this Earth, of being human, and of surviving the universal rites of passage that mark our lives as we age.
When I feel existentially lost, isolated, and convinced of the meaninglessness of my pain, I take a moment to witness the people around me. I watch people walking hand in hand at the park, or reading novels on the train, or sunbathing at the beach.
Somehow, the vast majority of people around me have weathered similarly painful times. The mere fact of their existence, when I’m certain I will shatter into nothingness, is strength enough to soldier on.
Before I learned the benefit of sitting with my feelings, doing work of this nature didn’t appeal to me. Why wallow in sorrow when you could just do something about it? I wondered.
When I felt uncomfortable, I would find a way to occupy my time and distract my heart. I’d burrow my nose in a screen until I was only dimly aware of the world around me; call one friend after another, repeating the same painful story, swimming concentric circles around my pain without ever diving in; grab a pen and scribble a to-do list to feel the rush of purposefulness at the expense of true catharsis.
In retrospect, it’s easy to see that my “coping strategies” were no such thing.
When we distract ourselves from our pain with a flurry of motion, we fool ourselves into thinking we’re being productive. We fall victim to the addictive high of the quick fix. But as any hard worker in any field will tell you, there is no substitute for good, hard work. Work that gives us a sense of our own intrinsic worth and yields desirable results.
Which begs the question: Given the undeniable difficulty of this brand of work, why do it at all? What is the reward for expending such mental and physical effort?
Different folks will offer different answers. As for me, I’ve always believed that our purpose on this earth is to live our richest, most beautiful lives. Anything less seems like a terrible waste of the gift of conscious experience.
I believe that in order to live such lives, we must live our essential truth. Living our essential truth means making the conscious effort to feel the spectrum of our pain, magnificent and minor. It means giving ourselves permission to feel emotions as they are, and rid our lives of the pressures to conform, perform, and self-delude.
When we act in accordance with our deepest feelings, our lives become simpler. Instead of constantly choosing how to act or what to say—spurring waterfalls of anxiety and self-doubt –there is always one choice: the choice that is true for us. The choice that we feel in our hearts.
The next time you are hurting, uncomfortable, or lonely, feel your pain. Feel as much of it as you can bear. Your pain is a necessary step on your journey towards healing. And remember:
You are doing your best.
You are healing at exactly the right pace.
You are doing work.
Your work has meaning.
It can serve a purpose.
It can serve you.
About Hailey Magee
Hailey Magee is a Codependency Recovery Coach who helps individuals conquer people-pleasing, set empowered boundaries, and master the art of speaking their truth. She has worked with over 100 clients from the US, Canada, Ireland, France, South Africa, and more. Sign up for a complimentary consultation to learn how coaching can help you live from a place of authenticity and inner freedom. You can follow Hailey on Facebook and Instagram, or visit www.haileymagee.com.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
This article came to me just at a time I needed it. Like in yoga, we are supposed to just breathe into the discomfort, and tension. Thank you for giving permission to be a mess, if that’s what I need.
Wonderful Article…
As in many ‘hero journeys’ more often then not, the way out is not immediately going up but going down.
Nice Article
I couldn’t thank you enough for these valuable words. This article was all I needed to read, it even had the power to replace a friend who’s no longer there… I think that working on strenghthening our selves is the most challenging thing to do.
It is so painfuly challenging to learn how to walk out from negative thinking, heart aches and from missing a special friend who used to always be the distraction that avoided this psychic crambeling.
Your words made me realise that we just have to go through that dark tunnel in order to reach that light at the end of it, hopefully. I am realizing more and more how important it is to rely on ourselves before anyone else, because it is just so so painful when we find ourselves in that abysse alone, so better to work on ourself and as you said work on what serves us.
Thank you very much.
Is it bad to reach out to people when you are in pain? I’ve been through some really painful things in the last 12 years. It started when I was diagnosed with cancer. Right now I’m alone. Terrified to reach out to anyone because I’m tired of being judged. I’m very sensitive and a empath. I’ve worked on myself so much. I cry. I feel my pain but it makes other people so uncomfortable. Then I isolate myself. If I’m in pain I can’t hide it. I’m so tired and feel so alone.
Thank you so much for sharing! People keep telling me to sit with my grief which did not comfort me. Somehow, your explanation and personal experiences opened my eyes.
Mmmm, great point Pieter! Love that perspective.
Thank you, Ramesh!
Thanks for sharing your story, Dave. I hope the next few days and weeks contain moments of peace as you work through the new and difficult development in your life. Personally, I need to remind myself to sit with my difficult feelings and do that work on an everyday basis. It’s funny how the “simplest” solution can be the most challenging! I am right there with you.
Darcy, love the mention of “breathing into discomfort and tension.” Exactly! I think it can be so valuable to not only give ourselves permission to be a mess, but to acknowledge that this moment of “being a mess” is a necessary and productive step on the journey towards healing. <3
Dave, love that image of a house being tidied up. Exactly! A never-ending, but always worthwhile (if difficult!) process.
I’m touched by your story, Chan. My heart’s with you. The loss of those closest to us is a uniquely dark grief. In my experience, those moments have been the hardest to sit with the pain and, simultaneously, the most important moments to sit with the pain. When I sit with that grief, it is a reminder that though I may have lost so much by losing that person, I did not lose myself. I am still here, living and breathing, pain notwithstanding. Thank you for your words.
Thanks for your words, Kathy. <3
Heidi, thank you for your courage in sharing your story. I hear you. As a fellow empath who feels very strongly, I can relate to your statement: “I feel my pain but it makes other people so uncomfortable.” In my experience, having others to share my pain with is critical for my healing process. Sometimes I’ll simply say to loved ones: “I know I’m bringing some heaviness to the table, but if you’re able to hear it, I really need some support right now.” Acknowledging the challenging scenario while also speaking your needs can create a safe environment for you to share your story without feeling rushed, judged, or intrusive.
Second time I’ve read this and it its home, again. Sitting with our truth and feelings is so difficult but very necessary.
One thing I’d add to this thoughtful article is that as we experience our emotional pain, as part of our practice of wholeness, in time we start to process it more quickly. It’s possible to stay too much in the pain as well as not enough. We will know the difference. How?, by how we feel.
How does one start this process? I have been stuffing stuff down for years. I’m numb and feel like a robot most days. I experience a lot of anxiety and I feel this is because I have unprocessed emotions. I’m a single mom of 3 and I keep myself so busy I barely have time to breath if feels like some days. I want to heal and have the best life possible. I just don;t know where to start.
I’m so happy it resonates with you, Nancy! It can be SO hard sometimes – but always worth it. Sending you strength on your journey!
Thanks for sharing some of your experience, @courtneywalllooney:disqus. As with most areas of personal growth, I like to think of this as working a muscle; it’s hard at first, but gets easier with practice. Start small. Perhaps at first, you give yourself a 5- or 10-minute window to be still and tune in to your feelings. As time passes, you might expand that window and carve out more opportunities to feel what you’re feeling. In my experience, summoning self-compassion and taking incremental steps forward is the best path. Sending you strength on your journey <3
Hailey, thank you so much for this article… I’ve found myself feeling weak and vulnerable, in addition to “doing something wrong” when I let myself feel anything lately. I know that I need to process my emotions and this article actually validated that I’m not crazy for wanting that for myself. I’ve shared it and at least 3 of my friends commented that it was exactly what they needed to hear today… I love that we can embrace our humanity and our emotions rather than stifle them to make everyone else more comfortable. Great article, and it’s been an important message for me as well as many others. Thank you!
Thanks for sharing some of your story, @disqus_yU5Lsy8K27:disqus — and for your kind words. So much space opens when we allow ourselves to feel all we’re feeling without judgment! Sending you goodness and strength on your journey!
YES!! ❤️ Thank you.
Thank you so much for this Hailey. I’ve just started my spiritual healing journey and I’ve found it really hard to cope with the negative emotions as I’ve always just ignored them so feeling them has been extremely painful but knowing that it’s normal and important to feel these emotions makes me feel so much stronger. Thank you <3