F
fhansen
Guest
I guess this is true if we define suffering as feeling sorry for ourselves. And I’ve done plenty of that. And without a doubt that will, if not cause suffering, certainly intensify the heck out of it!Even in athletics it is said that “Pain is inevitable; suffering is optional.” Suffering is primarily thinking about pain in a peronalized way so that emotions, mostly negative, about consequences are activated. Mostly we confuse these two distinct things. One is physiology, that other is mentality.
So why do we suffer? Usually because we have been trained to do so, either subtly, by design, or by default of inadequate mental tools. Good antidotes to suffering can, for instance, be found in such things as Byrone Katie’s 4 questions and turn around, the Callahan technique and its variants, and any course of critical thinking that aligns the mind with getting out of the victim position.
Historically this has been done by training, from Bushido just raw heroism, even in the face of daily life. As practicing Catholics, we have ways from prayer to services to deal with suffering, our own or other’s.