
How much worse off we would all be without physical pain! As counterintuitive as it sounds, pain is your friend. Pain is a mechanism to warn you that something is wrong. Imagine a scenario where there was no physical pain: When you get sick with a virus, you don’t feel bad, so you don’t take care of yourself. The virus spreads rapidly because there is no way to know that you have it until it is too late and people start dying! Death or relentless monitoring become the only 2 ways to know that something is physically awry. Who would want to live like that? Dramatically shortened lifespans and constant paranoia? No thanks!
Twenty years ago, when I was first diagnosed with cancer, it was pain that made me go see a doctor. Thank goodness the pain arrived in time! The doctors found it and treated it before it was too late. I’ve received 20 additional years on this good earth because of this good friend, pain. If it weren’t for pain, I wouldn’t be alive to write this today. I am grateful!
Because it is so familiar, physical pain is no longer very intimidating to me. Of course I don’t like it, but it’s manageable. Besides alerting me to something being physically amiss, it is helpful because it is purifying. It calls me to something higher. For instance, when a tech comes into my hospital room to wake me up in the middle of the night to draw blood, I am challenged to respond with kindness and docility. She appears abruptly with a bright light and sharp needle to do her job. This is rather unpleasant for me, but it’s also for my good. The LEAST I can do is be pleasant to her regardless of how I am feeling. Subtle sighs or groans of annoyance or self-pity only serve to assault her with an air of needless negativity. What good does that do? I admit that sometimes I fail, but the pain offers me a great opportunity. It calls me to become the best version of myself.
Compared to mental, emotional, and spiritual pain, physical pain is not so bad. As I look out over the city from my 10th floor hospital room, I know that there are people out there who are suffering greatly in far more profound ways. Loneliness, betrayal, injustice, discouragement, depression, shame, fear, grief, regret. I know all too well that that kind of suffering is greater – much greater – than my shivering, body aches, and throbbing IV entry point at the moment. It’s not even close. But even non-physical pain serves a purpose. It implicitly screams, “You were NOT created for THIS! This is NOT how you are supposed to feel!” Again, it reveals to us that something is wrong.
If we approach it properly, this non-physical pain can also be purifying. Nothing is more beautiful than a person who accepts his or her cross and joyfully carries it without anger or self-pity. I once knew a woman whose husband cheated on her and left her alone as a stay at home mom with five young children. Her pain was almost unimaginable. She dedicated the rest of her life to loving and caring for those children in a joyful way AND to praying and offering her suffering for the spiritual benefit of her philandering husband who had moved far away to start a whole new life. This woman had taken a vow on her wedding day and it wasn’t conditional. It was unconditional. So she simply lived out her vow. To witness such a person is to witness a depth of goodness and fidelity that is hard to fathom in this day and age. The pain and difficulty that she faced made her even more beautiful than before. She was heroically beautiful.
The good C.S. Lewis once said that pain is a megaphone to rouse a deaf world, that God whispers in our joys and shouts in our pain. I am well aware that I am sort of thick-headed, hard of hearing sometimes. I need to be shouted at. Pain helps me to correct my behavior. Thank goodness God created a mechanism to get my attention!
So how do YOU deal with pain? Does it make you more beautiful like my friend? Or does it turn you into a nasty self-absorbed person who then inflicts pain on others?
Although no one enjoys it, pain is a necessary evil. How you respond to it may determine your eternal destiny. Going forward, will you embrace your pain and choose to transcend it with LOVE or resent your pain and choose to be bitter?
The choice is yours.





November 6, 2024 at 7:52 am
This is 🥲💔 Thank you for this 🙏🙏🙏
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September 24, 2024 at 11:12 am
You are in my prayers!!
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September 5, 2024 at 8:55 am
I am new to this blog but already what a difference in my heart it has made. I am surrounded by family members who are godless, and my body is racked with pain since March from a car accident and I have been bitter and angry. God told me at Mass the other day to offer my suffering for those in most need of His mercy, as well as the Holy Souls in purgatory. God bless you all
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May 22, 2024 at 5:35 pm
I just heard your radio interview on the catholic station and quickly searched your blog so I could read the full article. Your wisdom about not laying victim to your suffering really struck me. What a testament of our faith it is when we press on with hope. What an opportunity to lead others to Christ, who suffered the most and still drew closer in love to God! Amen
Veronica
(fellow “accidental blogger”
at weatherthestorms.org)
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December 15, 2023 at 10:10 pm
Thank you for sharing your journey! I pray that your family may be united at home for Christmas!
Emotional pain. Oh, how deep and wide it can be without any light, any tiny light. But with Him, pain and peace can be present together. As we invite Him, He comes into the pain and gives His peace. He is peace.
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December 14, 2023 at 10:03 pm
Oh my goodness, Bob – so your reference to the woman with five children in your inspiring meditation on pain actually referenced my situation. I’m at a loss for words! I’m sure the idea of pain no longer even resonated with me because my family and I continue to experience God’s ongoing providence in our lives. (Some evidence: We will number 64 people in 2024! The blessings just keep coming. ). I’m grateful for this opportunity to praise and glorify Our Lord for keeping His promises.
Sent from my iPad
>
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December 13, 2023 at 12:06 pm
Love this, Bob! Sometimes when I’m really mindful during a painful experience whether physical or spiritual, it feels like I’ve been admitted to a special club by Jesus himself united by our suffering.
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December 13, 2023 at 11:20 am
Bev! How surprising and appropriate that you saw this post and read it! I hope I got the number of kids right because I couldn’t remember. 😉
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December 13, 2023 at 10:12 am
Your dad said it so well, Bob. Not only have you not complained in these 20 years, you have lived your life in joy. The joy of the Lord has been your strength! The best witness of all.
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December 13, 2023 at 7:49 am
You inspire me.
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December 13, 2023 at 6:12 am
Thank you again Bobby!
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December 12, 2023 at 10:50 pm
I needed to read this Losing a child is a great pain. Jesus helped me and my reward will be great when we are reunited in Heaven. Thank you Robert God bless you and your wife and family always 👍😊🙏❤️And happy you are home
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December 12, 2023 at 10:33 pm
Thanks Robert,
Really helpful.
Peace brother
PV
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December 12, 2023 at 10:57 am
Bob, hopefully you go home soon! I have to tell you that my S.A.D. and depression feel like the worst it’s ever been. But, reading about you and what is happening makes me feel guilty. I am able to offer up my physical pain but my emotional pain is much more difficult to let go and let God. I pray everyday for God’s will be done. I think of you and pray for you everyday. I miss our time at Redeemer radio! Home for the holidays for you!!! No snow for Christmas but you home in your own bed and with your family would be great!! Love, Barb Norris
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December 12, 2023 at 10:56 am
In the beginning 20 years ago……I received a telephone call from “Bobby” to ask me to meet him immediately at the grotto at Notre Dame. He had an urgency in his voice so I jumped in the car to meet him. When I got there, he told me he just found out he had cancer and was stressed about how his family would handle it. We prayed a rosary together. When we finished a priest, we both knew came by and asked what was going on. When Bobby told him he gave Bobby the Sacrament of the sick. Bobby was more concerned about how his loved ones would handle the news than what was going on in his body.
Since that day twenty years ago I have never heard him complain once, even though he had twenty some surgeries on his vocal cord, two stem cell transplants, chemo therapy, many strange side effects from treatment, heart attacks, stint surgery, pneumonia, Covid and so many visits to the hospital I can’t even count. NO COMPLAINTS !
I wish you all could hear his talks on The Value of Suffering, Prayer, The Holy Rosary, The Eucharist and others. He tops it all off now with “Thank God For Pain”.
I love you Bobby and keep up the good fight, stay positive, and I have a very strong feeling “every thing is going to be OK”.
DAD
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December 12, 2023 at 10:16 am
Thank you
Its a difficult subject to deal with, “why we have to suffer” appreciate it.
Barry
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