I’ve been through a lot in my lifetime, and you’ve probably
been through a lot of challenging things too. This is just the nature of
being a human being who has lived for more than a few years. Life is messy and none of us get through unscathed. We all
collect wounds and scar tissue throughout our lives, be they physical or
emotional.
In what has been almost the first 50 years of my life, I was bullied, heartbroken, and spent years in unhealthy relationships. I've had panic attacks, I tried to kill myself, I've experienced bouts of depression, and phases of sexual compulsiveness. In this life of mine, things just didn’t happen to me, I also did things that I wasn’t proud of. I broke a lot of hearts, made bad choices, suppressed my emotions, and lived out of integrity for years of my life. And yet through it all, I wouldn’t take any of it back - not for a single
second. Because all of those experiences made me who I am today. More on
that in a minute, but first, a metaphor for life that I absolutely adore.
The Most Valuable Metaphor For Life Ever - Imagine when you are born, your life is a large but empty room. And every single day, square building blocks miraculously
drop down from the sky and get stacked in the exact same place, for all
of your days on earth. These building blocks represent the experiences that you
go through. Regardless of whether you label them as positive or negative
experiences, they are simply experiences. These experiences keep
coming at you, whether you feel ready for them or not. While the experiences keep coming, early on in life, the
foundation isn’t very solid. In fact, it’s just a single, straight stack of one building block on top of the other.
Every few years, a large earthquake happens and the building blocks come tumbling down in a big messy heap. In practical/real world terms, this earthquake could be a
devastating breakup, the loss of a family member, or
sexual/emotional/physical abuse in a relationship. These earthquakes are
often some event that shakes you to your core and causes deep pain,
sadness, shame, or grief. It can feel alarming to go from having been ten building
blocks high, to now feeling like you’re starting over from nothing. Your
building blocks have scattered and you may feel like you’re back to
square one. Which, in a way, is the truth. Yet, without fail, the building blocks keep descending from the sky
just as they always have. They never stop, and they keep being placed
in the exact same spot.
This pattern carries on. The building blocks stack
themselves in one place, and infrequent earthquakes keep happening over
the course of your lifetime. Over time, the foundation of the building blocks becomes
higher and higher. Eventually, you don’t feel each earthquake as much as you
used to. This isn’t to say that you don’t feel the quakes at all, because you
absolutely do. You still feel the earthquakes when you’ve been through
ten of them, just as you continue to feel the grief of your close
friends dying even if you’ve already known other friends and family
members who have passed away previously. You don’t become numb to the earthquakes, you just feel
stronger and more resilient because your foundation is increasingly
wide.
This is life. Experiences keep coming at you. You live
them, you feel them, and every now and then, your life gets shaken up by
something significant. Everything crumbles to the ground. And yet, over time, it gets easier to deal with because
you become more resilient. You can say with confidence “I have felt a
pain like this before, and it didn’t break me, so I will get through
this as well.”
All Of Your Suffering Was Worth It - No matter what you have been through, it has made you who you are today. It has made you stronger, more resilient, and more able to be a pillar of support for others that you cross paths with. For so many years of my life, I thought that life was just
happening to me. I thought that all of my suffering was unnecessary,
that the pain I was experiencing was just life being cruel. I eventually came to realize that life wasn’t happening to me, it was happening for me. We can only ever experience true compassion and deep
empathy when we have been through something similar to the person we are
being an emotional support to. With each life experience that I
went through, I was then that much more able to be a supportive healer
for every person who was currently suffering in a way similar to what I
had gone through. I was able to move from “That sounds awful” to “I’ve
been there. I get it. It’s absolutely the worst.” and have it mean that
much more.
Seen in this light, all of our suffering is a gift. Your suffering allows you to become:
- More compassionate
- More empathetic
- Less judgmental of others experiences
- More self-aware
- More self-loving and self-compassionate
- More aware of relationships that don’t serve you, and more able to remove yourself from them
- More resilient under pressure
Does suffering automatically allow you to become this way?
No. You have to do some healing from the suffering in order to have
it turn to compassion, resilience, and self-love. Your pain has to be felt, experienced, and lived through.
Buried pain does not turn into compassion and self-love, it turns into
judgment, physical tension, illness, anxiety, and depression. Compassion comes from healed pain. Whether it’s immediately apparent or not, your suffering was all worth it, and the gifts that you gleaned from your most traumatic experiences will only become more apparent with time...
You just told my story - thank you. I needed to hear /read this today.
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