Pain is a universal human experience, but when tragedy strikes, our desperate search for a logical “why” often becomes a wall that prevents us from healing. To truly heal, we must move past the search for simple, clinical answers.
Here are five transformative truths about navigating loss and pain:
- Pain is a signal, but suffering is a story. Pain is simply your body’s natural
alert system, whereas suffering is the heavy narrative of fear, guilt, or shame you
wrap around that pain. By separating the raw hurt from the story you tell yourself,
the distress becomes far less overwhelming. - God is a participant, not a distant observer. It is normal to feel abandoned in
your agony, but God enters directly into our pain rather than offering cold
explanations from afar. Even Jesus cried out and asked “why” on the cross,
proving that questioning is a human response, not a lack of faith. - Healing requires engagement, not avoidance. Running from trauma through
denial, anger, or isolation only prolongs the season of suffering. True healing
begins when you actively face your pain through practical outlets like journaling,
community support, and mindfulness. - Suffering can be uniquely transformative. Pain is rarely a cosmic punishment
for past mistakes; instead, it can act as a profound, albeit painful, teacher. While
the pain itself isn’t “good,” it can be repurposed to deepen your empathy, faith,
and connection to others. - Your deepest wounds can heal others. Once you navigate your own storm,
your personal tragedy can become a valuable resource to help others. The pain
that once isolated you becomes the bridge that brings hope to someone else
navigating their own dark valley.
- Pain is a signal, but suffering is a story. Pain is simply your body’s natural
The Bottom Line Suffering rarely comes with a quick fix or tidy answers. The ultimate
goal is not to escape or fully understand the mystery of your pain, but to discover the
grace and community that have been waiting within it all along.
Rey Tonsay
My PhD in Clinical Christian Counseling Journey