Do you spend a lot of energy avoiding pain? Many trauma survivors spend a huge amount of time trying to avoid emotional pain. It is a natural response, but one that complicates our lives tremendously. The biggest sign you have that you are avoiding your pain is if you are doing things compulsively. Some examples include the following:
Do you exercise
frequently, for hours at a time, several times per week?

All of
these are common strategies many people use to avoid pain. You may have
other ways not listed here that you use to avoid pain. The key is, are you
constantly trying to avoid feeling your pain? If you are, therapy
is
a good idea. Avoiding one's
feelings just makes things harder. Your body needs a
way to express these feelings, so they will come out in one way or another. If
you are able to cry, get angry, and experience your
feelings thoroughly and don't
avoid pain, your body doesn't need
to find another way to do it. But, if you are
avoiding, you will constantly seek out distractions, find yourself acting out
the pain in other ways. You may find
yourself getting angry
for no apparent reason, developing physical problems, such as an ulcer,
back
aches, headaches, jaw pain, or chronic muscle tension.
Some people develop even more
serious health problems like heart attacks,
strokes, and chronic bowel
problems because
they avoid their emotional pain
for long periods of time.
Learning to deal with your pain will help you in all
areas of your life. If you are a pain avoider, reach out for
support! Pain avoidance
interferes with your happiness and health! You can't avoid feeling one emotion
and feel
the others. You have to repress them all. It is the biggest warning sign that
something is wrong in your life. Listen to your behaviors and reach out for
support!