Deborah Barrett Ph.D., LCSW on March 23, 2013
Pain is inevitable, but suffering and misery are not. The more we fight pain, the more likely we are to experience hopelessness and despair, and the harder it becomes to identify constructive change. Like those Chinese finger-trap toys, the more forcefully we tug to release our index fingers, the more tightly ensnared they become. Calming down opens the means to escape.
Pain is inevitable, but suffering and misery are not. The more we fight pain, the more likely we are to experience hopelessness and despair, and the harder it becomes to identify constructive change. Like those Chinese finger-trap toys, the more forcefully we tug to release our index fingers, the more tightly ensnared they become. Calming down opens the means to escape.