Its Not The Pain Olympics

May 2024 · 3 minute read

I was walking my daughter to the bus stop one morning and it was chilly. I live in Charlotte, North Carolina. Since I’m in the South, it’s usually warm, but lately the temperature in the mornings has been between 50 and 65 degrees. When I walked to the bus stop I had a coat on, and I heard this little girl say, “Oh my gosh it’s so chilly,” and my neighbor said to her, “It’s not that cold. I’m from Chicago. You think this is cold?” 

I was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan. I’m talking about negative temperatures and snowstorms, all of the cold weather things but diminishing someone else feeling cold because I know colder doesn’t make any sense to me. That little girl’s sense of cold is based on this climate and where she is located. So if the baby is saying 55 degrees is cold to her then it’s cold. It may not be as cold as Chicago or Detroit, but as a person who moved to Charlotte from one of those places, and who donated all of her coats the first year she was here, I want all my coats back because my body has adjusted. This is my new cold. 

We have to stop comparing our pain and our experiences with everybody else's. We each experience our lives in relation to everything that we have going. Nothing is isolated. So what may not be that bad for one person, may really be a hardship for someone else. We have to let people go through what they’re going through without trying to make it seem like it’s not a big deal because there’s something out there that’s worse. There will always be something worse, that doesn’t mean what that person is experiencing doesn’t hurt or isn’t sad or uncomfortable. 

We play this comparison game because:

When we create a pain hierarchy and diminish people’s experiences we:

When someone is dealing with something or looking for support, they don’t need us to downplay their experience. It isn’t the time for us to center what we have been through. Each of our experiences are uniquely our own and we need to be allowed to have them. 

What is something challenging you experienced that someone else told you wasn’t that bad? How did that make you feel?

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