When Avoiding Pain Costs Us More
Sometimes the things we try hardest not to feel are the very things that quietly grow heavier inside us.
I recently watched someone I love ignore real physical pain. What started as something small became something serious. What could have been treated early almost turned into something life-threatening. Not because she didn’t care about her health, but because facing pain is hard, and fear takes over.
Admitting something is wrong is hard. Slowing down long enough to heal is hard. And grief can work the same way.
As moms who carry loss, they know how tempting it is to push the pain aside just to survive the day. They stay busy. They take care of everyone else. They tell themselves that they will deal with it later. But unprocessed pain doesn’t disappear; it waits, it lingers.
And most of the time, it grows heavier than it ever needed to be. Healing doesn’t ask us to relive everything all at once. It simply asks us to be honest about what hurts.
Sometimes healing looks like:
- letting yourself cry instead of staying strong
- saying “this is hard” out loud
- asking for help instead of carrying it alone
- resting when your body and heart are tired
- allowing God to meet you in the places you try to avoid, seeking him
Small moments of honesty in our open wounds protect us from deeper wounds later. And here is a hope:
Nothing you are carrying is too broken, too late, or too far gone for God to meet you there.
One honest step at a time… healing is still possible.
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