Releasing emotional pain
Today I would like to share a beautiful reflection by my friend Taiya Evras on releasing emotional pain. I feel sure you will inspired by it as much as I have been.
Heavy, smothering, exhausting, debilitating, pain. Yes physical pain can seem this way. I am speaking here of emotional pain. Letting go of pain can seem difficult, but why? When you have lived with a pain and ignored that pain for a long time, here you must determine what is a long time for you, it becomes familiar. It becomes a part of not only your soul but your very existence. Things you do each day, choices you make will reflect the “hanging on to” the pain. It becomes as a mate that in your mind you wish to be free of, but in your heart you would fear to lose it. It becomes comfortable, wearable, excusable. It is not.
Pain is something you can choose to hold in your hand rather than your heart. By holding it in your hand you possess the power to let it go and the power to grasp it tighter lest it would fall. Envision the pain you feel as this ball in your hand. It is as a ball of light. Look at it. Examine it. A part of it is beautiful, it has brought you to this place and to be this person you choose now to be. Perhaps this pain holds a great memory of something you love, or someone. Recognize that it has served it’s purpose to you. Perhaps it has guarded you from making choices that would have exposed you to more pain.
Now see the ball, the pain, a different way. See the darkness in the ball. What have you missed in your life, who has come to you and left while you held this darkness? You may even have had tangible opportunities that you passed up in order to continue to hold the ball.
Now it is time to do something that Society tells us never to do. It is time to drop the ball. I promise that if you drop this ball of perceived control over your pain, the world will not end. The Universe will not fold into itself and collapse. But your world, your Universe will change dramatically, well it can. It’s up to you how much, when and how.
This is not a rubber super-ball. It will not bounce back to you. When it falls, it falls endlessly into the cosmos below you. The only way to retrieve it, is to determine to bend down and reach and grab hold, to decide to hold the pain, to take it back. Do not make this choice once you have broken free. To pick up the pain and to continue to carry it with you, will never serve you well. You will never truly move beyond this place where your pain exists with you. Pain holds you and pain is not a kind or gentle lover.
Now look again at your hands. You have dropped the ball. Realize that your hands are empty, free now to hold something new. Perhaps it is even the hand of someone who was there all along. Perhaps, your hands may reach out to someone or something new. Rejoice that your hands are free!!
It is said that ‘Happiness is about giving up something precious to get something better’. I struggled to understand this statement when first I heard it said. Why, I wondered, having something precious would you let it go to pursue something you only perceive as being better? Then I realized that we can hold many things in our mind or perception as ‘precious’ without their being good or good for us. Pain can be revered as precious if it has been a constant companion. If pain has seemed to protect us, if it has become a comfortable way to live, we might be persuaded to believe it is precious. It is not made good however, simply by familiarity.
There is great fear in letting go of what is familiar, comfortable, safe….precious. Resist this fear. Push with great force against it and you will find how easily it will submit. You must walk toward what you fear to know that it cannot hurt you. Take this idea one step further. Walk through what you fear and in living you will know that what you fear cannot hurt you. Walk. It is an action verb. It requires movement, whether physical or intellectual or emotional. You cannot stand in one place and wait for a healing to begin. You cannot wait for what you fear to come to you. By ‘walking’ toward your fear you let it know that you are taking back control. You live your life.
To heal when one has experienced extraordinary trauma, takes time and patience and willingness. To participate in someone else’s healing process, takes time and patience and willingness. A healing person who has suffered a loss is most often lost themselves. It is difficult to find your way back when the path you believed you should walk has suddenly become dark, rough and winding. Your footsteps, once sure are now stumbling. Your eyes which once looked only ahead to the future, search frantically for focus, for something familiar, a stray beam of light which might mark the path. Some may stop walking altogether in a desperate act of self-preservation. They dig down their heels into the soft dirt and simply choose not to go on, they are without direction, without light, without hope.
Remember, you must walk toward what you fear to know that it cannot hurt you. You are stronger than any fear. You are brighter than any darkness. You have within you the power and strength to heal from any pain. When you are ready you will find around you the people, resources and love you need to support you on this journey.
Letting go of the pain does not mean that we forget, but rather that we remember so well that we no longer need to visit it everyday. To give it it’s due and move forward from this place is how we honor what is past.
excerpts from “Living With Intention” © Taiya K. Evras 2007 all rights reserved

Beautiful, beautiful reflection – thanks for sharing with us. I really needed to hear this today!
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“You are stronger than any fear. You are brighter than any darkness. You have within you the power and strength to heal from any pain.” I am officially adopting this as my mantra today 🙂
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Where can I find more about this writer? I tried to find this book on amazon but can’t find it? Thank you.
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This book is not in publication but it is open to offers! As you can see Taiya is a terrific writer and it would be wonderful to see her work in print. If anyone knows of a publisher who would be interested please contact me!
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There is great fear in letting go of what is familiar, comfortable, safe… I would agree with this statement but as Taiya says we must push past this fear in order to truly heal. Very inspirational writing – thanks for sharing.
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Great analogy with the ball – it is a good mental image to hold when struggling to relase old wounds and hurts
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Really enjoyed reading this post today – found it very inspirational.
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Beautiful writing – thanks for sharing it with us today.
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Drop the ball! That is perfect, Taiya. I love the thought, the meditation and spirit that illuminates all your work. Thank you so, so much.
Love,
Jody
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What a beautiful meditation to begin my day with….I hope the author finds someone to publish her work. Thank you for sharing!
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“…Things you do each day, choices you make will reflect the “hanging on to” the pain. It becomes as a mate that in your mind you wish to be free of, but in your heart you would fear to lose it. It becomes comfortable, wearable, excusable….”
“A healing person who has suffered a loss is most often lost themselves. It is difficult to find your way back when the path you believed you should walk has suddenly become dark, rough and winding. Your footsteps, once sure are now stumbling. Your eyes which once looked only ahead to the future, search frantically for focus, for something familiar, a stray beam of light which might mark the path. Some may stop walking altogether in a desperate act of self-preservation. They dig down their heels into the soft dirt and simply choose not to go on, they are without direction, without light, without hope.”
This is me. In all my pain, in my bubble, i am amazed that someone can so closely articulate the way I feel. Intellectually, I know I am not the first person ever to lose the love of their life, but emotionally I have felt that no one in the world knows how I feel.
My heart does not want to drop the “ball”. It is all I have left…..
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Dear Taiya,
I knew you were a gifted writer like my other Twisters Jody, Marie and Debbie, but this piece is amazing. Thank you very much for sharing it with us, I will keep it in my heart hwat evre happens. Big hug, Annemieke
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I would love to read more of this author’s work – this is so beautiful.
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I love this! So articulate – as nancy points out!
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I am so pleased to see by your comments that Taiya’s beautiful writing touches you all as deeply as it does. Publishers out there – take note!
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Beautiful!
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Taiya writes so eloquently and gives meaning to all of our insecurities, fears and thoughts that we can’t express.
To Nancy (uvmer), I can’t imagine what you are going through, but have been in my own very dark place filled with pain. There is a way out. Please remember this last line from Taiya.
“Letting go of the pain does not mean that we forget, but rather that we remember so well that we no longer need to visit it everyday. To give it it’s due and move forward from this place is how we honor what is past.”
It takes time!
Thanks for sharing Marie!
Love, Debbie (debmthomas)
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What beautiful writing and great images concerning emotional pain, letting go and healing. We all have the capacity to heal and the author beautifully illustrates emotional pain and the great promise it holds in letting go to achieve wellness, resilience and reconciliation.
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Like Nancy I am amazed that someone could articulate my own feelings so well. What a beautiful piece and how familiar it all sounds…
We have all suffered loss and pain at some point in our lives. For some of us it was a physical pain, for some it was the pain of losing a loved one that died, and some of us have experienced the pain of having to let go of a great love.
And like so many of us I too have held on to that ‘ball’ – because it was familiar, it was what I knew. It even became my companion and gave me a strange sense of comfort.
It took courage, insight and a great love of self to finally be able to let go.
I do visit the ‘ball’ sometimes. I greet it like an old friend, we spend some time together and then I say goodbye again. I wish you all the strength and the courage to do the same.
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Thank you all so much for your kind words! I am overwhelmed! It was healing, cathardic, for me to write this…I needed to hear it myself. I still find the need to revisit this excercise from time to time. Nancy…it doesn’t have to be today, just be assured that when you’re ready there will be a swell of Love and support that the Universe will provide you.
Much Love to each of you!!
Taiya
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