国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more

Pain is pain, and it鈥檚 bad enough. Suffering鈥攚hich is additional distress and misery layered on top鈥攐ccurs only when you try to fight that pain.
Pain is pain, and it鈥檚 bad enough. Suffering鈥攚hich is additional distress and misery layered on top鈥攐ccurs only when you try to fight that pain. (Photo: Axel Brunst/Tand)

How to Make Friends with Pain

To get the most from your performance, you have to accept the unpleasant鈥攁nd keep pushing

Published: 
Pain is pain, and it鈥檚 bad enough. Suffering鈥攚hich is additional distress and misery layered on top鈥攐ccurs only when you try to fight that pain.
(Photo: Axel Brunst/Tand)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

This month, during the final few miles of the 122nd听running of the Boston Marathon, if all goes to plan, elite U.S.听marathoner Des Linden will be in a world of pain.

Pain is, after all,听necessary for Linden鈥攐r any athlete鈥攖o get the most out of herself. But, Linden says, 鈥淚 won鈥檛 spend time negotiating with myself about ways to relieve it.鈥 Instead, when the pain arrives, Linden will check in with her body, relax her arms and jaw, and dial in her breathing pattern. 鈥淲hen I鈥檓 hurting, I check in with the physical sensations of my body,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I also remind myself that this is what I signed up for.鈥

Linden doesn鈥檛 fight the pain. She embraces it. And in her trade, the ability to do so is one of the fundamental elements of听success. A 2012 meta-analysis published in the journal Pain that athletes possess a higher pain tolerance鈥攖hat is, they can endure more of it until they reach their breaking point鈥攃ompared with听the general population.

Pain can be a bit of a catch-22: often听the more you try to wish it away, the worse it becomes. According to modern psychology (), therein lies the difference between pain and suffering. Pain is pain, and it鈥檚 bad enough. Suffering鈥攚hich features distress and misery layered on top鈥攐ccurs only when you try to fight that pain.

Consider the of Steven Hayes, a well-known clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at the University of Reno, Nevada. He鈥檚 shown that the more you resist or try to avoid unpleasant thoughts, feelings, and sensations, the stronger and more frequent they become. 鈥淚f you cannot open up to discomfort without suppression,鈥 he , 鈥渋t becomes impossible to face difficult problems in a healthy way.鈥

Hayes鈥檚 work is based on . When you鈥檙e in pain, be it physical or emotional, you need not make it worse by resisting it. It鈥檚 better to accept the pain and commit to accomplishing your goals, and oftenthat means carrying the pain with you.

In the midst of pain, 鈥渢houghts like 鈥楾his is killing me,鈥 鈥業 can鈥檛 stand it any longer,鈥 or 鈥楬ow long will this go on鈥 may all move through your mind at one point or another,鈥 explains Jon Kabat Zinn听in his seminal work, 鈥淵ou may find such thoughts coming and going constantly. A lot of them are fear-based, anticipatory thoughts about how bad the future may be. It is good to notice that none of them is pain itself.鈥

Zinn, who is a听professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and a world-renowned meditation teacher, has helped everyone from cancer patients to elite athletes deal with discomfort. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not always the pain per se, but the way you see it and react to it that determines the degree of suffering you will experience,鈥 he .

Much like Hayes, Zinn recommends that instead of fighting pain you should acknowledge it and hold it in your awareness鈥攅ven curiously explore and warmly embrace it. Treating pain in this manner, he鈥檚 found, almost always makes it easier to bear.

Embracing pain may sound nice conceptually, but that doesn鈥檛 make it easy to do in the heat of the moment. One way to build this facility is through meditation. show that individuals who meditate regularly feel the same amount of pain as those who don鈥檛, but they respond much differently. Instead of reacting to the pain with a massive stress response (i.e., suffering) they accept the pain, sit with it, and then move on. In the words of Zinn, instead of fusing with the pain they are able to 鈥渃radle it in their awareness,鈥 which in turn听dampens its effect.

Another way to prevent pain from turning into full-blown suffering is to have what my close friend and Steve Magness calls a calm conversation.听, who is a running coach at the University of Houston and also works with听many top pros, says that the conversation, which should be deployed when workouts or races start to get really tough, goes something like: 鈥淭his is starting to hurt now. It should. I鈥檓 running hard. But I am separate from this pain. It is going to be OK.鈥

Similar to regular meditation, Magness鈥檚 calm conversation gets athletes in the habit of creating space between the physical sensation of pain and their reaction to it. 鈥淚f you fight the pain, or freak out at its onset, that鈥檚 when you really suffer and tend to crumble,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut if you learn how to somewhat dispassionately observe your pain, you increase your chances of working through it.鈥

Brad Stulberg () writes听国产吃瓜黑料s Do It Better column and is the author of the new book听.

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online