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YanWhen 09-11-167 |
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When We Hurt Prayer,
Preparation & Hope for Life's Pain Philip
Yancey Zondervan,
2006, 127 pp. ISBN 978-0-310-81058-2 |
During his twenty seven years of research and
ministry among lepers in India, Dr. Paul Brand discovered that deformities occur
from leprosy because it destroys the ability to sense pain. Yancey teamed up with Brand to write the
remarkable book, Fearfully and
Wonderfully Made. In this
beautiful little gift book, Yancey presents some of Dr. Brand's most helpful
writings on the topic of pain. Few experiences in life are more universal than
pain. "I am convinced that the
attitude we cultivate in advance may well determine how suffering will affect
us when it does strike." (10) We
have the ability to step outside ourselves and self-reflect, which makes it
possible to change the very landscape of the pain we experience. We can learn to cope, and even to
triumph. (11) "Pain is not the enemy, but the loyal scout
announcing the enemy." (20)
"Pain is a priceless essential gift--of that I have no
doubt. And yet only by learning to
master pain can we keep it from mastering us." (23) Perception of pain is largely determined by
competing inputs to the brain and the emotions and attitudes. The mind can alter the perception of pain.
(29) No one can experience another person's pain. It is the loneliest, most private
sensation. (35) Pain protects us from destroying ourselves. Yet pain itself can destroy. "The response to pain is in large
degree learned." "An active
body, one that seeks challenges and pushes the limits of endurance, is best
equipped to handle unexpected pain when it does occur--and to prepare for it
in advance." (44) Anxiety and depression can intensify pain. Gratitude is the single response most
nourishing to health. (46) Most pain centers include programs of
relaxation and meditation. (54) The best single way to prepare for pain to have a
support group you can count on in emergencies. (57) "To a very large extent, the course of
healing in any individual patient depends on what takes place in the
mind." (61) We feel helpless and trust the medical experts
too much and put too little trust in the most powerful healer, the human
body. (62) "Not everyone can master the skill of
autosuggestion over pain. But we
should be encouraged enough to believe that, even if we cannot abolish a
specific pain, we can probably make it hurt less
. All of us carry around atop our necks the
amazing capacity for pain management." (68) Barbara Wolf (Living
with Pain) "recommends work, reading, humor, hobbies, pets, sports,
volunteer work, or anything else that can divert the sufferer's mind from
pain." (72) Coping with chronic
pain depends on a patient's willingness to exercise and increase productive
activity despite the feeling of pain. (73)
"I consider that our present sufferings are
not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us." Romans
8:18 Fear, anger, guilt, loneliness and helplessness
intensify the conscious perception of pain. (79) Fear is the strongest. With a reduction of fear, pain may
decrease. If anger is allowed to
fester in the mind and soul, it may poison the body, affecting pain and
healing. (89) "Our anger and
annoyance are more detrimental to us than the things themselves which anger
or annoy us." (90, quoting Marcus Aurelius) Guilt compounds mental suffering. (93) "The presence of a caring person can
have an actual, measurable effect on pain and on healing." (96)
"Standing side-by-side with patients and families in their suffering is
a form of treatment in itself." (98)
The attitudes of hope and optimism are most
important emotional factors in fighting back against pain intensifiers. "Suffering is only intolerable when nobody
cares." (116, quoting Cicely
Saunders) "The Bible gives overwhelming emphasis to God's
passionate involvement with creation.
It is virtually a catalog of God's emotions in relating to
humanity. From creation onward, God
places himself in the position of an anxious Father whose children run free.
God voluntarily put himself in the position of being affected by
creation. Love involves giving, and God,
self-complete, has only himself to give.
By sending the Son to earth, God learned to feel pain in the same
way we feel pain.
By looking at Jesus, we realize we have
such a God. He took on the limitation
of time and space and family and pain and sorrow.
God hears and understands our pain, and
even absorbs it into himself--because he kept those scars of the crucifixion
in his resurrected body as a lasting image of wounded humanity. God has been here and has borne the
sentence. The pain of humanity has
become the pain of God."
(117-119) "Everywhere a greater joy is preceded by a
greater suffering." (124, quoting Saint Augustine) "I take comfort in the fact that somehow, in
the mysterious resources of the human spirit, even pain can serve a higher
end." (125) |
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